bike setup for extremely rocky terrain?
#16
Posted 01 May 2012 - 08:46 PM
I'll go old school on this one
How many hours on the suspension ??
Are the front fork triple clamp bolts torqued to specs(if over torqued they will bind and not work properly)
With the front wheel off the ground remove the air from the forks..
Set sag on the rear shock
Hows all the swingarm and shock bearings..all greased ??
Turning in on the settings make it harder(stiffer) on compression and loosen it makes it softer
Rebound... tightning makes it slower and loosen makes it return faster.
Make the front and rear soft and ride the same section checking it on the same area and doing changes will tell you better if your getting closer or farther way..
#17
Posted 01 May 2012 - 09:03 PM
i run m59 front with 10 psi and a heavy tube
back i run an intermediate with 10 psi and a heavy tube
stay on the pegs and on the gas
#18
Posted 01 May 2012 - 09:51 PM
CARL REHATCHEK, on 01 May 2012 - 08:46 PM, said:
I'll go old school on this one
How many hours on the suspension ??
Are the front fork triple clamp bolts torqued to specs(if over torqued they will bind and not work properly)
With the front wheel off the ground remove the air from the forks..
Set sag on the rear shock
Hows all the swingarm and shock bearings..all greased ??
Turning in on the settings make it harder(stiffer) on compression and loosen it makes it softer
Rebound... tightning makes it slower and loosen makes it return faster.
Make the front and rear soft and ride the same section checking it on the same area and doing changes will tell you better if your getting closer or farther way..
only few hours on suspension but i did recheck and reset the sag
triple clamps are tightened properly no binding
lower and upper shock bearings are brand spanking new
#19
Posted 01 May 2012 - 10:06 PM
The most common revalve I here of is a request to do everything ECEA. It's a little too soft for sand whoops but good in the rocks. In that senario a lot of guys will run a step harder springs for sand. Play with the clickers but I never recommend all out and especially all in because it has a binding effect. If your suspension is too stiff you will feel like you're getting beat up physically. The whole key is to have smooth lines and no bouncing around. Throttle is steady and not skitso.
Factory Connection & WER revalves are top notch but Eric at Town & Country does a really good job along with Bud at Matto cycle for a little less money. All these shops know our series/terrain.
Tires are important too. Use a front tire with a LESS agressive sidewall knob so you don't grab the rocks and deflect. For the rear a trials tire is tops for traction and consistantly driving the front foward.
Finally try a friends bike with revalved suspension. I just tried a friends this past weekend and it felt like a soft pillow in the slow chop. Soon enough you will find out what you do and don't like.
Good luck
#20
Posted 02 May 2012 - 12:19 AM
JIM AIELLO, on 01 May 2012 - 10:06 PM, said:
The most common revalve I here of is a request to do everything ECEA. It's a little too soft for sand whoops but good in the rocks. In that senario a lot of guys will run a step harder springs for sand. Play with the clickers but I never recommend all out and especially all in because it has a binding effect. If your suspension is too stiff you will feel like you're getting beat up physically. The whole key is to have smooth lines and no bouncing around. Throttle is steady and not skitso.
Factory Connection & WER revalves are top notch but Eric at Town & Country does a really good job along with Bud at Matto cycle for a little less money. All these shops know our series/terrain.
Tires are important too. Use a front tire with a LESS agressive sidewall knob so you don't grab the rocks and deflect. For the rear a trials tire is tops for traction and consistantly driving the front foward.
Finally try a friends bike with revalved suspension. I just tried a friends this past weekend and it felt like a soft pillow in the slow chop. Soon enough you will find out what you do and don't like.
Good luck
my suspension is revalved for a woods set up for my weight my ability and for ecea and other series type harescrambles
it was done by rees at pro action by blue diamond mx in delaware
#21
Posted 02 May 2012 - 06:15 AM
my suspension is revalved for a woods set up for my weight my ability and for ecea and other series type harescrambles
it was done by rees at pro action by blue diamond mx in delaware
[/quote]
You spent the bucks with rees at pro action. To me that means you have the foot in the door to go bug the crap out of rees at proaction until he can help you get it right or at least close.
#22
Posted 02 May 2012 - 06:30 AM
Ultimately, to best understand your suspension, YOU have to take the time to experiment.
#23
Posted 02 May 2012 - 06:46 AM
You asked where the OxBo Hare Scramble would be held earlier. You will need a rock set up for this race because the location is the same as last year @ the Foot Of The Mountain in Neelyton PA.
#24
Posted 02 May 2012 - 06:49 AM
I also like Carl's comments. Always start with the basics.
Final thought is steering dampers. I feel they are especially applicable to rocks and deflection problems. More so than sand.
This post has been edited by mike walters: 02 May 2012 - 06:50 AM
#25
Posted 02 May 2012 - 08:23 AM
#27
Posted 02 May 2012 - 08:17 PM
Denny Mann, on 02 May 2012 - 06:46 AM, said:
You asked where the OxBo Hare Scramble would be held earlier. You will need a rock set up for this race because the location is the same as last year @ the Foot Of The Mountain in Neelyton PA.
do you have an exact location like an address possibly? or is there a way to see the adresses for these events that i cant find???
i didnt do to many races last year i pick and chose my races cause army national guard keeps me from attending many events
#28
Posted 02 May 2012 - 08:20 PM
mike walters, on 02 May 2012 - 06:49 AM, said:
I also like Carl's comments. Always start with the basics.
Final thought is steering dampers. I feel they are especially applicable to rocks and deflection problems. More so than sand.
Personally i dont like steering dampners i just dont like em they probably would be good for rocks but i personally would never run one
#29
Posted 02 May 2012 - 09:38 PM
Like Randy Brown mentioned earlier,"Ultimately, to best understand your suspension, YOU have to take the time to experiment." Testing is key. I went to the Chris Smith riding school 10 years ago at the Moonshine enduro. There was a suspension tech who spoke about tuning and testing. He advised to test with a street curb which is common to your bike's liar. Without going over the long details, adjust your clickers till the bike tracks straight at a consistant speed over and over. It will take time to aquire a skill for body position and throttle control until you will notice changes to your clickers. If the rear end keeps kicking up in the air back off the compression. If it bottoms increase the compression. If it soaks it up good but still kicks increase rebound (slower). Play with one thing at a time. If you get totally confused go back to the suggested settings in your owners manual or suspension tuners suggestions if revaled and start over. Once your suspension is balanced pay attention to speed with your odometer. A moto suspension should work better at faster speed than a rock suspension. You have to find your speed for the terrain you ride.
#30
Posted 02 May 2012 - 09:39 PM
Josh Headley, on 02 May 2012 - 08:20 PM, said:
Personally i dont like steering dampners i just dont like em they probably would be good for rocks but i personally would never run one
Dude, really? If you go fast, and ride the rocks, you need to control the front wheel deflection. Not so much in the sand, but rocks.... yea. Try one. It takes a little time to see if it works, and you do have to adjust the dampening (yes, just like a shock), so now you have yet another setting to tune. But when you get all 3 set, you will be a rocket

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