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progressive springs
Ok folks, Im off to YC’s tonight to drop some springs in the front of my bike. There progressive suspension springs for the 1999 curvy (no adjuster cap). Ive have a look at the instructions and it says trim the spacer to suit. Nowthen. Just so I know in my own mind what were doing im thinking that this means we need to shorten the spacers already in there. However I ve measured the springs and there significantly longer than the stock spring length. So is it just a case of shortening the spacer so it’s the same overall length? Or do I have to measure my weight and do some calcs?
Cheers. |
Re: progressive springs
your not a fat bum, so i doubt you'll need spacers, but YC will sort you out anyway...hes got a load that came out of one of mine ;-)
which incidently I didn't know there were spacer already in there...hope he put summt back in *confused blonde look* ps don't worry about them being longer than stock. Mine were too |
Re: progressive springs
No doubt Y-C will sort it out for you, but the spacers need trimming so that the preload on the spring is right for your weight. Normally done by sitting on the bike in riding kit and measuring.
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Re: progressive springs
Ok got these fitted at yc's lasst night with 10w oil. Nowthen im not too sure what improvement i should be looking at. However it is definaly less crashy over bumps and potholes (of which they are many) are much less of an issue. It also seems to handle corners better and has a little less wobble if i brake or accelerate mid corner.
Nowthen it also apears to have a bit more travel than before. We set the air gap to 140mm as per the springs instructions but i know 110 is standard. Could somone tell me what this air gap does? Also it rattles on about preload. Now we set them to the same length (overall) as the standard one but there appears to be a little more travel? not too sure though. Would sticking a couple of washers in there help this? Oha nd does anyone have some of those adjusters that would fit a curvy? Not that i actually will be needing them but just bacause i havnt spent any money on the thing in the last 12 hours :) |
Re: progressive springs
oh and what to stick on the rear? thats cheap!
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Re: progressive springs
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Re: progressive springs
We fitted them with effectively 30mm of preload from relaxed state.
Oil air gap, as I understand it, acts like a second spring which is in parallel with the main spring so the rates basically add up. This affects the rate under hard braking when the forks are compressed. Changing the springs does NOT affect the total travel. Total travel is distance between the top out spring and the hydraulic lock piece (bump stop). If the forks had 100mm of range before they still have the same. Rear shock depends on your weight and inside leg. SRAD750 is nice, but soft and tall. ZX6R is harder, better damped and not much taller. do the cable tie trick like I said, go and brake hard and see how much travel you are using. I have never had much luck taking sag measurement on the front. |
Re: progressive springs
What about srad 650?
Ill give it a go tomorrow if my legs still work after tonight :) |
Re: progressive springs
no such thing as an SRAD 650 :-P
SRAD600 is really tall. Not sure if it's too tall. |
Re: progressive springs
Oh ok. Ive taken a quick look at a zx6r and there only about 35 quid. Any year to go for? And what are they like to fit?
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