Dare I start a suspension thread....
#11
I've read 104mm for dirt bikes or at least heavy dirt riding and 93 for our KLX seems like a sweet spot.
Perhaps I should reduce the amount of compression on the rear which would reduce the slamming or bucking but then leave or slightly increase the rebound so the spring is controlled when it drops out after compressing more???
#12
kind of helps to have two people to do sag adjustments...front, you can use zip ties to measure...the rear, you kind of need help to measure and also to watch the rebound and hold the bike for you too....i fiddled around with the sag adjustment after some freeway wiggles at high speed....just couldn't get it right...
i finally went to evolution motorcycle in santa clara and paid the $40 to have my suspension adjusted...best $40 i spent....i'm confident at all speed now and my klx is stable through almost anything....i had them set it up more for pavement and freeway, so it's stiffer...it's fine for fire roads and dirt trails....but, for the rough bumpy stuff and small leaps, it destroyed my last set of sf wheels...
i finally went to evolution motorcycle in santa clara and paid the $40 to have my suspension adjusted...best $40 i spent....i'm confident at all speed now and my klx is stable through almost anything....i had them set it up more for pavement and freeway, so it's stiffer...it's fine for fire roads and dirt trails....but, for the rough bumpy stuff and small leaps, it destroyed my last set of sf wheels...
#13
Yeah, I have that and the FSM. I guess I know where to to make the adjustment but I have no idea how to tune for results if that makes sense. The one thing I couldn't find is what the rear sag should be. I've read a few things in the FSM and it tells you specs, how to adjust things and service limits. But it all pertains for putting the bike back to show room specs.
If you're anywhere near Hayward, I can give ya a hand.
Ride on
Brewster
#15
I'm down, I'm actually going for a ride tomorrow morning with another KLX'er and a buddy with a CRF250L. The KLX guy is a total newbie so I'm not sure where we'll end up but you guys are welcome to join. FYI it might be a south bay ride because the newbie is on a permit still.
If the 1/3 rear sag is a good rule of thumb then at 9.1 total travel I should shoot for 76mm...being at 85 it would make sense that my bike has sagged a bit since it was new.
More sag makes it more or less stable???
If the 1/3 rear sag is a good rule of thumb then at 9.1 total travel I should shoot for 76mm...being at 85 it would make sense that my bike has sagged a bit since it was new.
More sag makes it more or less stable???
#17
I suspect that too much sag would have a negative effect on handling, the back would be low changing the steering geometry. With the help of your new riding buddies you'll have your bike suspension tuned in no time. The stock springs might be just right for you. Once you get that rear sag set and a bit of tweaking of the shock settings: fun, fun,fun!!
#18
I'm just thinking when I adjust things I'd rather error on the side of stability. lol
#19
Mark, knowing you, you'd buy the parts and do it yourself. It's not hard. You can get the Race Tech Gold Valve kits from various vendors and John at Moto Pro supplies excellent kits too.
#20
When I bought the bike last year the first thing I noticed was that it would really beat you up when trying to get aggressive off road. I check and adjusted the sag on both ends and tried to adjust out the harshness on the front end but it just didn't help. I finally bought a set of gold valves and set them up to Race-Techs suggestion. Completely transformed the bike-the front end sticks where I want it and eats up the gnarly sections without trying to snap my wrists off. Do the forks and it will change the bike.