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 proximity Crazy Courier

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| MarJay |
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 MarJay But it's British!

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 proximity Crazy Courier

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 MarJay But it's British!

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 proximity Crazy Courier

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 MarJay But it's British!

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 proximity Crazy Courier

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| Howling TerrorOutOfOffice |
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 Howling TerrorOutOfOffice Super Spammer

Joined: 05 Dec 2008 Karma :    
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 Posted: 22:59 - 28 Jun 2009 Post subject: |
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Hi, in answer to your question does your suspension affect handling even on a smooth road..yes is the short answer.
Suspension is working all the time even on smooth surfaces, forces are changing all the time so sloppy suspension will have various side effects. I've just changed my fork springs, rebound springs and correct amount oil. The difference is big and positive
As recommended by others change your fork oil at the very least and start saving for a nice rear shock. Front springs have a longer lifespan but they get shorter over time, cheap fix is spacers(coins) but they don't cost a bomb to replace. I fitted the progressive type and they suit fine. They feel lively* on very uneven roads at slow speeds, but feel planted and true at higher speeds on the same road
* Lively as in i could feel the road surface, no skipping etc
Pat ____________________ Diabolical homemade music Bandcamp and Soundcloud
Singer songwriter, Artist and allround good bloke Listen to Andrew Susan Johnston here
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| steo |
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 steo Nova Slayer
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 proximity Crazy Courier

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| Noxious89123 |
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 Noxious89123 World Chat Champion

Joined: 10 Jun 2007 Karma :    
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 Posted: 20:17 - 29 Jun 2009 Post subject: |
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Can standard factory fit shocks be rebuilt?
My bike is at 26k, and think my shock might be rather bouncy, although I'm not sure what it should feel like, nothing to compare it to  ____________________
'06 Honda CBR125RW-6 ~ '00 Honda CBR600F-Y ~ '07 Honda CBR600RR-7 ~ Bikeless
'53 Ford Ka 1.3 ~ '03 Vauxhall Astra SRi 1.8 ~ '52 Vauxhall Astra SRi 2.2 ~ '53 Vauxhall Astra GSi |
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| MarJay |
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 MarJay But it's British!

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| Noxious89123 |
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 Noxious89123 World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 17:45 - 30 Jun 2009 Post subject: |
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I know I can get a rather sexy looking WP shock for about £530 Worth it or not?
Need to buy a car first though... And forks, just an oil change, or would they need anything else doing? (Like new bushes etc?) ____________________
'06 Honda CBR125RW-6 ~ '00 Honda CBR600F-Y ~ '07 Honda CBR600RR-7 ~ Bikeless
'53 Ford Ka 1.3 ~ '03 Vauxhall Astra SRi 1.8 ~ '52 Vauxhall Astra SRi 2.2 ~ '53 Vauxhall Astra GSi |
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| the grim reaper |
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 the grim reaper World Chat Champion

Joined: 29 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:50 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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Without riding the bike it's different to tell, a fecked rear shock will affect the handling but not in the way you describe and I would expect you to notice the rear end pogo-ing or showing some other traits before the front starts to feel iffy. If it was me, I would do the following:
1. Fork oil and bushes, maybe seals if any signs of leakage
2. Wheel bearing check (although these are usually noisy when failing)
3. Check all suspension settings, front and rear, set your sag levels etc from here https://www.sportrider.com/bikes/146_street_bike_suspension_settings/index.html
4. If no improvment, check the bounce on your rear shock and change the settings for compression and rebound for your riding style.
5. If still no change, then think about the shock and buying a new one.
All the other options are cheap as chips compared to the rear shock and how gutted would you be if you spend £500+ on a shock and it makes feck all difference?
Cheers
Grim ____________________ Adverts don't always work: Remember that advert, where the army are running across the desert and they have a wounded man on a stretcher. They get to a ravine, the bridge is down and a caption pops up that says, 'What are you thinking?'. I don't know about you but I was thinking, 'Christ, I'm glad I'm not in the f***ing army'. |
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| MarJay |
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 MarJay But it's British!

Joined: 15 Sep 2003 Karma :     
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 Posted: 13:13 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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| the grim reaper wrote: | Without riding the bike it's different to tell, a fecked rear shock will affect the handling but not in the way you describe and I would expect you to notice the rear end pogo-ing or showing some other traits before the front starts to feel iffy. If it was me, I would do the following:
1. Fork oil and bushes, maybe seals if any signs of leakage
2. Wheel bearing check (although these are usually noisy when failing)
3. Check all suspension settings, front and rear, set your sag levels etc from here https://www.sportrider.com/bikes/146_street_bike_suspension_settings/index.html
4. If no improvment, check the bounce on your rear shock and change the settings for compression and rebound for your riding style.
5. If still no change, then think about the shock and buying a new one.
All the other options are cheap as chips compared to the rear shock and how gutted would you be if you spend £500+ on a shock and it makes feck all difference?
Cheers
Grim |
I have heard of plenty of front end issues which have actually been caused by the rear shock. Even if it isn't the cause, the shock will be shagged after 50k miles anyway. ____________________ British beauty: Triumph Street Triple R; Loony stroker: KR1S; Track fun: GSXR750 L1; Commuter Missile: GSX-S1000F; Cheap project: CBR900RR FireBlade
Remember kids, bikes aren't like lego. You can't easily take a part from one bike and then fit it to another. |
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| the grim reaper |
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 the grim reaper World Chat Champion

Joined: 29 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 13:46 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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| MarJay wrote: | | the grim reaper wrote: | Without riding the bike it's different to tell, a fecked rear shock will affect the handling but not in the way you describe and I would expect you to notice the rear end pogo-ing or showing some other traits before the front starts to feel iffy. If it was me, I would do the following:
1. Fork oil and bushes, maybe seals if any signs of leakage
2. Wheel bearing check (although these are usually noisy when failing)
3. Check all suspension settings, front and rear, set your sag levels etc from here https://www.sportrider.com/bikes/146_street_bike_suspension_settings/index.html
4. If no improvment, check the bounce on your rear shock and change the settings for compression and rebound for your riding style.
5. If still no change, then think about the shock and buying a new one.
All the other options are cheap as chips compared to the rear shock and how gutted would you be if you spend £500+ on a shock and it makes feck all difference?
Cheers
Grim |
I have heard of plenty of front end issues which have actually been caused by the rear shock. Even if it isn't the cause, the shock will be shagged after 50k miles anyway. |
Quite possibly, unless the bloke is a 9 stone type, in which case the shock could well be fine. What I was saying is that to replace a shock for a handling problem that could be something else would be daft. Why replace the most expensive option first before doing a simple fork oil change that could sort it. The shock could then go on for another 10k miles before it needs replacing, giving the OP time to save up for a WP or Ohlins etc.
Cheers
Grim ____________________ Adverts don't always work: Remember that advert, where the army are running across the desert and they have a wounded man on a stretcher. They get to a ravine, the bridge is down and a caption pops up that says, 'What are you thinking?'. I don't know about you but I was thinking, 'Christ, I'm glad I'm not in the f***ing army'. |
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 proximity Crazy Courier

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 the grim reaper World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 14:20 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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| proximity wrote: | I have serviced the forks yesterday. The internals were all nice and shiny and the oil didnt look too bad. Bearings checked aswell.
I bagged a bargain rear shock off ebay which is not new but certainly a lot newer than mine so we will see what that does.
Im starting to think maybe it could be tyres, i know the front tyre is approaching its wear limit in the next thousand miles or so. |
Unless your pressures are way off, I would doubt the 020s would cause the bike to fall in, they are quite a rounded profile, so tend to be stable and on the slow side as far as turn in is concerned.
Have you checked the suspension settings and done your sag setup? Having ridden a ZX6R that had been fiddled with, I can confirm that suspension settings can really screw with a bike's handling.
Cheers
Grim ____________________ Adverts don't always work: Remember that advert, where the army are running across the desert and they have a wounded man on a stretcher. They get to a ravine, the bridge is down and a caption pops up that says, 'What are you thinking?'. I don't know about you but I was thinking, 'Christ, I'm glad I'm not in the f***ing army'. |
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| Phoenix |
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 Phoenix Twisted Firestarter

Joined: 01 Aug 2002 Karma :    
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 Posted: 15:44 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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| the grim reaper wrote: | Quite possibly, unless the bloke is a 9 stone type, in which case the shock could well be fine. |
Exactly, to just blankly say, replace the shock it's knackered becuase it's done 50k isn't very reasonable. I weigh about 10stone and have done most of the mileage on my blade, it was owned by a guy of similar build before me, at 30K the shock is still absolutely fine.
I changed the fork oil and seals for the sake of it the other week and after doing 4000miles I can't say I noticed any difference, but my bike was heavily loaded, but at least it's been done.
To me your issue sounds like front wheel bearings, they aren't always noisy when they fail or start to fail, I had one collapsed rear wheel bearing once and noticed no noise at all, but the back end felt 'wobbly' which is how I knew.
Also make sure you're checking the head bearings right, they should move side to side smoothly and shouldn't settle in a rut of any kind (often they fall back to centre and sit there), and make sure no fowards and backwards play.
Quick test of the rear shock is if you push down on the back of the bike and it bounces straight back up then it's knackered, it should come back up more slowly...the damping effect. Even if it is gone it's not certain that's what's causing your cornering issue and i'd expect it to affect higher speed cornering not low speed.
First step though is obviously tyres as you mention, if the front tyre is triangular at all or has any kind of shape other than perfectly round to it then it can make it feel crazy, also a heavily square rear tyre make it all of a sudden tip in when you go over the 'edge' of the square bit. Also tyre pressures need checking obviously. |
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 Noxious89123 World Chat Champion

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 Phoenix Twisted Firestarter

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| swiftb |
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 swiftb World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Oct 2008 Karma :  
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 Posted: 20:15 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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This is a topic which for me is currently screwing my enjoyment of riding. A 2000 Zx6r which im guessing has been messed with supsension wise and hence feels a mess. No matter what settings I dial in it feels harsh, juddery, skips about and generally provides a horrible ride. The rear feels fairly stable and all problems are coming from the front or it certainly feels that way. Im tempted to go the same way as you proximity and replace the whole lot with lesser mileage examples (bikes on 30k). Although one of my compression adjusters is seized so I have no adjustment on that - but I reckon theres a lot more to it than just compression settings as the bike really does feel awful at the min  |
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| Noxious89123 |
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 Noxious89123 World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 20:29 - 01 Jul 2009 Post subject: |
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Seized? Sure it's not just been screwed in too much, and jammed itself? Would explain why it's so hard. ____________________
'06 Honda CBR125RW-6 ~ '00 Honda CBR600F-Y ~ '07 Honda CBR600RR-7 ~ Bikeless
'53 Ford Ka 1.3 ~ '03 Vauxhall Astra SRi 1.8 ~ '52 Vauxhall Astra SRi 2.2 ~ '53 Vauxhall Astra GSi |
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 proximity Crazy Courier

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 swiftb World Chat Champion

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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 16 years, 215 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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