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Originally posted by glib View Post
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Originally posted by mmattockx View PostSince nobody has said it yet, yes, you are expecting too much. You can't compare a heavy 30+ year old bike with a flexi-flyer frame and skinny bias ply tires to a modern, stiff frame bike on big fat radials. That said, you certainly can make your bike much better and there is lots of good info here to do that.
You can lean much, much farther in that case. On my 1100E I have Shinko 230's, the front is scrubbed to the edge and the rear has about 1/4" of chicken strip (I assume from being pinched on the narrow rim). I have not touched anything down getting there in moderately aggressive street riding. I have 1" longer IKON shocks, Sonic springs with RT emulators up front and a Kerker 4-1 canister system that probably has significantly more ground clearance than the stock pipes. Cases and footpegs are stock and haven't touched at all.
That's a good breakdown and a fair question. I find riders are usually the determining factor, even on the track (at duffer speeds). A fast rider on a slow bike works way better than the other way around.
Mark
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Originally posted by glib View Post"Shifting to the realm of unrealistic expectations, I rode on Saturday with a guy on an Aprilia 1000r and I was left wanting in the corners.
So am I expecting too much or is there more work to do?"
Originally posted by glib View PostNearly new Michelin in back (3/4 in "chicken" strips).
Originally posted by RichDesmond View PostFast street riding is 50% how many chances you're willing to take, 40% rider ability, 10% bike.
If you and the guy on the Aprilia switched bikes, what would have happened?
Mark
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Originally posted by Old Colt View PostAre your springs firm enough?
personally I would not slide the forks up if you intend to adjust preload with spacers. Just set the spacers.
Fork Brace, If you stand in front of the bike and clamp the wheel between your legs, then turn the bars. Can you detect any twisting in the forks?
If everything is in good shape there should be no detectable twist. If you detect any twist get a good brace on there. Anything that clamps over the rubber boots is for show only.
Do you have a Go Pro?
Rig one up so you can review your ground clearance after a ride. There can be allot to learn from that since on the road you can not creep in on limits as you can on the track.
The front is tight but I am going to put a fork brace on before my next ride. Just have to go through some shelves of parts to find it.The springs, Sonic 1.0, I believe are perfect.
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Guest repliedOriginally posted by glib View PostSo currently there is no pressure when the bike is on the stand. I tried letting out the pressure with the bike off the center stand but the front dropped further and besides too much sag, I was concerned about my fender hitting the fairing.
Are your springs firm enough?
personally I would not slide the forks up if you intend to adjust preload with spacers. Just set the spacers.
Fork Brace, If you stand in front of the bike and clamp the wheel between your legs, then turn the bars. Can you detect any twisting in the forks?
If everything is in good shape there should be no detectable twist. If you detect any twist get a good brace on there. Anything that clamps over the rubber boots is for show only.
Do you have a Go Pro?
Rig one up so you can review your ground clearance after a ride. There can be allot to learn from that since on the road you can not creep in on limits as you can on the track.
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Originally posted by Steve View PostSince the cap pretty much seals the fork tube, any compression of the tube WILL increase the pressure. Simple physics. That is why you do all your pressure readings with the bike on the centerstand, so everything will be at a fixed, repeatable volume.
If you release some of that pressure when the forks are compressed, then put the bike back on the centerstand, you will have a partial VACUUM in the forks.
You might be better off removing your Schrader valves (your air-fill thingies) and putting in some plugs, so you won't be tempted to play with the pressures.
.
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Since the cap pretty much seals the fork tube, any compression of the tube WILL increase the pressure. Simple physics. That is why you do all your pressure readings with the bike on the centerstand, so everything will be at a fixed, repeatable volume.
If you release some of that pressure when the forks are compressed, then put the bike back on the centerstand, you will have a partial VACUUM in the forks.
You might be better off removing your Schrader valves (your air-fill thingies) and putting in some plugs, so you won't be tempted to play with the pressures.
.
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Originally posted by Steve View PostMeasure the distance from two points on the forks, or from the fender to a triple, while the bike is on the center stand. Do the same thing with you on the bike, geared up and ready to ride. You will obviously need a helper for that. That is your "sag". (You probably already know this.) That amount should be about 15-20% of total travel. Our bikes have between 5 and 6 inches of travel, so about an inch is a good number to shoot for. If your sag is 1.5", check your spacers in the forks, make some that are 1/2" longer than what's in there. That will raise the bike 1/2".
No worries about adding or releasing any air, just add some length to the spacers.
.
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Measure the distance from two points on the forks, or from the fender to a triple, while the bike is on the center stand. Do the same thing with you on the bike, geared up and ready to ride. You will obviously need a helper for that. That is your "sag". (You probably already know this.) That amount should be about 15-20% of total travel. Our bikes have between 5 and 6 inches of travel, so about an inch is a good number to shoot for. If your sag is 1.5", check your spacers in the forks, make some that are 1/2" longer than what's in there. That will raise the bike 1/2".
No worries about adding or releasing any air, just add some length to the spacers.
.
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Originally posted by Steve View PostI thought you had different springs in there?
With proper springs in the forks, the only "preload" you need should be mechanical, not pneumatic.
It does not matter how fresh all of your parts are, you WILL leak air from the forks. When that happens, you will return to your "too much sag" condition. Determine how much sag you need to remove, pop the tops off the fork tubes. Remove the spacers, make new spacers that are longer by the amount of sag you want to eliminate. That way, you will need NO additional air, which is a very easy measurement to duplicate for every ride.
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Originally posted by glib View PostThen I simply released the pressure from the forks until I achieved the desired pre-load ...
It does not matter how fresh all of your parts are, you WILL leak air from the forks. When that happens, you will return to your "too much sag" condition. Determine how much sag you need to remove, pop the tops off the fork tubes. Remove the spacers, make new spacers that are longer by the amount of sag you want to eliminate. That way, you will need NO additional air, which is a very easy measurement to duplicate for every ride.
.
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Originally posted by mrbill5491 View PostIf you are talking about the complete set up, you'll need two spacers in the place of the units...at least on mine I do. Look at yours, mine support the bottom of the headlite mounts.
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Originally posted by glib View PostIs there any reason the equalizer should not be removed altogether if it's not going to be used and the tubes moved up?
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Originally posted by RichDesmond View PostWhat springs do you have?
I think I confused the different terms in the RaceTech instructions, free, static, race etc. and though using Sonic instructions, ended up measuring incorrectly in the front. I think I had too little sag on the ride last weekend and now, without added air, I have too much actually. After correcting this, the final result will be a lower front, smaller rake angle--maybe two degrees. Maybe that will help.Last edited by glib; 02-24-2018, 10:08 PM.
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