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Old 03-May-2009, 22:21   #1
khushy khushy is offline
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I have some . . .
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Originally Posted by bradders
have been out today and the cable tie I fitted is right at the bottom. I know its not sliding down, you can see where the slider is going to, I am just using all the travel!!

so how do I sort this? bike seems to ride well, and is super planted even on the bumpiest roads, but need to get some travel back, so is it up the preload, or stiffen compression, or both?

there is too much sag, so I will be upping the PL anyway, just want to know if I need to do more

thanks

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Old 03-May-2009, 23:23   #2
DSC Region Organiser skidlids skidlids is offline
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The main thing about spring rate is that it is a measure of how much the spring is compressed by a given weight. which is why the amount of suspension travel is oh so important.

Then you have to look at what is going to use up your suspension travel and spring accordingly.
For road riding I would pick a shock with 65mm of travel over one with 60mm of travel any day, same goes for the front forks and a good match/balance between the two is also a factor as both wheels will encounter the same size of bumps at the same speed although the rear wheel normally has more mass so needs the shock to be sprung a bit stiffer so nowing your linkage ratio helps, although playing with the Nitrogen pressure in the shock can have a similar effect to playing with your front fork air gap.

the more travel you have the lighter spring you can use and the less force the rebound damping has to deal with

But as Paul is talking about his standard 848 forks and wanting to get more of the travel back I would try increasing the preload and worry more about remaining suspension travel followed by loaded sag and not worry about unloaded sag.

I have ridden a lot of miles with Paul, seen him ride my DD bike and know how hard he rides and if he keeps bottoming those forks it wont be long before he makes a dent in the scenery somewhere


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Old 03-May-2009, 23:31   #3
DSC Region Organiser Dementor Dementor is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skidlids

I have ridden a lot of miles with Paul, seen him ride my DD bike and know how hard he rides and if he keeps bottoming those forks it wont be long before he makes a dent in the scenery somewhere

Let's get it sorted then, we don't want that









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Old 04-May-2009, 00:10   #4
DSC Region Organiser skidlids skidlids is offline
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Do not confuse Fork travel with the overall travel of a progressive spring

A progressive spring could go from 0.6kg/mm to 1.2kg/mm over a distance of 180mm

So has an average spring rate of 0.9kg/mm

Lets assume the rate of change of the spring is linear (gets more complicated if its non linear)
Now if your fork only has 120mm of travel, without any pre-load the travel will use the 0.6kg/mm up to the 1.0kg/mm part of the spring, giving you an average of 0.8kg/mm, so softer than the spring average.
Now if you pre-load the spring by 30mm you end up using the 0.7kg/mm to 1.1kg/mm part of the spring giving you an average of 0.9kg/mm the same as the spring average.
Now if you pre-load the same spring by 60mm you use the part of the spring that is in the 0.8kg/mm to 1.2kg/mm giving an average spring rate of 1.0kg/mm resulting in stiffer than the total spring average.


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Old 04-May-2009, 00:38   #5
bradders bradders is offline
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up the preload then

job for Tuesday
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Old 13-Jun-2009, 02:43   #6
tattooed-punk-kid tattooed-punk-kid is offline
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What setup
What setup are you running . springs, forks, bike, shock.

For a bike such as a SS all the way to a 999 this could be as simple as static sag and changing the shimming on the compression stack and 3mm bleed hole as the Showa 2040 shim stack are quite useless out of the box.

But on somthing like a old monster it would require change of springs and fittment of emulators etc.

Please send em what your setup is so i can advise you of what setup.
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