Do be aware, gentlemen: that particular FJRTech article was authored by Mike Carpenter (mcarp) over two years ago, so what may be known now may not have been known back then.The FJRTech guide writeup called out Belray 10W which = 33.0 cSt@40C.
Does this imply any fork oil cSt@40C = 30 - 36 should have similar results?
Correctomundo! I had no idea (I'm the old mcarp) whatsoever that viscosity ratings were not based on simple W ratings. I personally am keeping it simple by using the same brand and viscosity (Silkolene RSF 10W) and adjust clickers and oil height as experimentation factors.Do be aware, gentlemen: that particular FJRTech article was authored by Mike Carpenter (mcarp) over two years ago, so what may be known now may not have been known back then.The FJRTech guide writeup called out Belray 10W which = 33.0 cSt@40C.
Does this imply any fork oil cSt@40C = 30 - 36 should have similar results?
Yo B-Well, stiffer springs will change the handling a lot. The key, however is balance.When I thow in the new springs, I guess the old baseline will go out the window.I hope just a stiffer spring rate brings nirvana.
Plan B, will be to try higher oil level.
I like the idea if sticking with same oil and adjusting oil level.
Sounds wise and takes all the high tech bla,bla, out of the picture.
Gotcha. The new shock will be a godsend! All bets are off right now with worn out suspension.A fresh almost new OE '05 shock is on the way and will get shimed 3/16. (thanks to DRFJR)That's the best the coin purse allows this year.
I am planning my '07 out of state rides at the moment.
The Gap in Spring (maybe early June with LGizmo)
The EOM (see youe there)
Probably Kentucky or Ohio overnighters in the summer.
There will definitely be an Spring group ride in Hoosier National forest.
After 4 years there are finally enough IN riders to represent.
Found a cool new road yesterday.
With the cool temps we went 25 minutes without catching up to a single car.
I am up for a maintenance thing, but roads suck around my house.
Maybe we can get someone in SW Ohio to step up as host?
The wheel is your guide. Pop your forks up into the tree and tighten the pinch bolts. Note that you can spin the lowers round and round so obviously it doesnt matter how they go into the tree. Once you put the axle through the wheel, it's aligned. Assuming you didn't get the left and right mixed up B)No where in the service manual (put forks in and tighten pinch bolts) or the online directions for reinstalling the forks does it talk about alignment. Are there guides in the triple trees that the forks will only go in one way?
Do final torque on triple clamp after the wheel is mounted. The front axle gets it aligned for you.No where in the service manual (put forks in and tighten pinch bolts) or the online directions for reinstalling the forks does it talk about alignment. Are there guides in the triple trees that the forks will only go in one way?
Thanks. I just had a Mencia Dee Dee Dee moment.The wheel is your guide. Pop your forks up into the tree and tighten the pinch bolts. Note that you can spin the lowers round and round so obviously it doesnt matter how they go into the tree. Once you put the axle through the wheel, it's aligned. Assuming you didn't get the left and right mixed up B)No where in the service manual (put forks in and tighten pinch bolts) or the online directions for reinstalling the forks does it talk about alignment. Are there guides in the triple trees that the forks will only go in one way?
Is that for all years of FJR's ?? :blink:For everyones information, the shop manuel calls for 664ml of oil.
As stated before, height is a better measurement than volume. After adding oil up to the 100 mm mark, pump the fork tube 10 times to purge air and completely fill the various valves and passages (spring removed of course), then remeasure and add to the mark. Only then can one be assured he's done all he can to have the correct fill volume IMHO.Is that for all years of FJR's ?? :blink:For everyones information, the shop manuel calls for 664ml of oil.
06 shop manual calls for 23.53 oz or 696 cc's Height is the way to go as Radman says and 06 is 92mm.Is that for all years of FJR's ?? :blink:For everyones information, the shop manuel calls for 664ml of oil.
No way. I tried 15w, then 20w. 20w works much better.Is everyone using 10 weight fork oil?I put new 10W in, in August.
Even significantly tightening the compression and rebound, the front Avon is still squirmier than before on hard decel.
I now have new .95 kg/mm springs to put in.
Newer rear shock coming and a preload shim waiting for it..
Stick with 10 W?
Go thinner?
Changing the oil level is the wrong thing to do. Raising it will simply but the burden of supporting the weight of the front end on your fork seals. If you over fill them, it will blow out your fork seals. If you underfill them, the oil will foam from sucking air and you will lose dampning force. The correct way to adjust it is to change the viscosity of the oil. If the manufactures had ever meant to have oil level as a adjustment, they would have listed the level as a variance, ie. 100-150 cm etc.Correctomundo! I had no idea (I'm the old mcarp) whatsoever that viscosity ratings were not based on simple W ratings. I personally am keeping it simple by using the same brand and viscosity (Silkolene RSF 10W) and adjust clickers and oil height as experimentation factors.Do be aware, gentlemen: that particular FJRTech article was authored by Mike Carpenter (mcarp) over two years ago, so what may be known now may not have been known back then.The FJRTech guide writeup called out Belray 10W which = 33.0 cSt@40C.
Does this imply any fork oil cSt@40C = 30 - 36 should have similar results?
Quik...I suggest you experiment with oil height (higher), preload (turn it in, a little does a lot) and clickers (go stiffer) and setting sag again at both ends before changing the oil out to a different brand. Another thing to consider is wheel alignment. I've messed this up before on another bike and similar results as you've mentioned. Keep in mind your old oil was probably getting thicker than stock due to particle buildup. Have you been slowly softening things up since you got your '03?
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