View Full Version : Steering Dampers
Dualcyclone
24-12-07, 11:47 AM
Hi,
I just wanted to get some peoples recommendations on steering dampers - if anyone has one!!
I never thought about getting one until my crash on my daytona last year, I figured a steering damper is probably a wise purchase :)
Cheers,
Luke
yorkie_chris
24-12-07, 11:50 AM
http://www.hardracing.com/images/scotts06GSXR.jpg
Never used one, but fnarr fnarr it looks good :-P
ASM-Forever
24-12-07, 05:00 PM
http://i50.photobucket.com/albums/f308/keedo666/Sv650%20Photo/P1010064.jpg
Here's a photo of mine.
I quite like the feel it gives to the bike when steering, but i only really feel the benefit when i'm accelerating quickly on dodgy roads.
That said i've ridden a mates bike without a damper, since i fitted mine and it felt 'wrong'.
I've also ridden a bike with a GPR(i think anyway) one fitted and it felt really knotchy. No way near as smooth as mine.
All statements are IMHO of course.
metalmonkey
24-12-07, 05:40 PM
They are different school of though on dampers, I read a few post about it on the mini twin site, that was you don't need really need one for racing a mini twin, so I guess it depends on you and also what bike ur riding.
It may be best to spend the cash on suspsion first, though me being a 10 short ass stone i can get away with alot more, than u heavier lot.
To be honest are going to notice a lot of differnce riding around town ect? I mean me being in da city, the roads are quite bad and you never hit speed until you get of town, well I don't any way.
Its personel choice I would sday, but have no plans to fit one of my road sv, race bike thats a different matter.
phil24_7
24-12-07, 07:07 PM
I have a K5 GSX-R one that I'm contemplating selling!
northwind
25-12-07, 12:34 AM
I've nothing against the idea- in fact I've always been tempted to get one in a cross-yoke fitment, as they look fantastic :smt045 But, with the SV they're generally a patch for another defect, rear shock, and the cost of a decent damper will go most of the way to sorting the fault itself instead of covering it up.
phil24_7
25-12-07, 12:44 AM
Shush Northy, you'll put people off buying my damper. ;-)
Ratty46
25-12-07, 10:50 AM
i was thinking of getting one after a big tankslapper, after asking on teh org, many suggested suspension upgrades first. i didnt have teh many to change fork springs or rear shocks, so i had my bike set up by B-aka BN Racing Science off londonbikers, made a world of difrence no longer twitchy, only when pushed really hard over bumps do i get a slight twitch, bike turns in quicker and holds a line better through the corner.
still thinking about upgrading my rear shock, and getting a damper, cos they do look very cool :D
Dualcyclone
25-12-07, 09:03 PM
i was thinking of getting one after a big tankslapper, after asking on teh org, many suggested suspension upgrades first. i didnt have teh many to change fork springs or rear shocks, so i had my bike set up by B-aka BN Racing Science off londonbikers, made a world of difrence no longer twitchy, only when pushed really hard over bumps do i get a slight twitch, bike turns in quicker and holds a line better through the corner.
still thinking about upgrading my rear shock, and getting a damper, cos they do look very cool :D
This is the exact reason why I thought of getting one - when I got side swiped I ended up having a big tank slap, which had I not had, I reckon I'd have been fine and not fell off!
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