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Rear wheel hop/ rear suspension?

Started by Alan Spears, September 09, 2013, 03:23:25 PM

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Alan Spears

Went for a long ride on some dirt/gravel roads this weekend. Every time I had an uphill section my rear wheel would start to bounce and spin, to the point where I would have to slow to a first gear crawl in order to get traction. I am assuming it has to due to rear shock setting or just the fact its a stock shock (all settings maxed out) I'm a 6'2" 225 lb rider. My question is the obvious... what can I change (if any) to make this better? If stock just wont work then what works for you guys?



Mustang

new shock is desperately needed ................... :bug_eye
it has probably been the contributor to your light feeling front end also

Alan Spears

Quote from: Mustang on September 09, 2013, 04:34:42 PM
new shock is desperately needed ................... :bug_eye
it has probably been the contributor to your light feeling front end also

Is there a consensus on which rear shock to get for an 02?

Mustang

The hagon is going to be the least expensive .......about 600 bucks for one that has remote preload like the oem on your Girly

Link for Hagon in the USA  http://www.davequinnmotorcycles.com/cgi-bin/webc.cgi/HAGON_MONOSHOCKS.html
ohlins are unobtainable for girlies
wilbers are good but you are going to need a second mortgage
penske is going for 800-1200 bucks


the aftermarkets are all good compared to the OEM unit
depends what you want to spend

Advwannabe

At your size and weight I would avoid the Hagon and anything else that doesn't have a remote reservoir.

Tigger has a long swingarm and no linkage so the shock has to work very hard. Once the oil overheats you are back to where you were with the stocker.

I'm about to replace my Hagon with a Wilbers tp try and eliminate this problem. You are welcome to grab my Hagon to give it a try, it will be cheap, but really you should just bite the bullet and do the job properly the first time.
No good deed goes unpunished
02 Tigger
02 Blackbird
75 GT380
IBA #33180

Dutch

Quote from: Mustang on September 09, 2013, 09:59:10 PM
wilbers are good but you are going to need a second mortgage
The good thing, that mortgage doesn't have to be on a big estate  :icon_wink:

Picture in Dutch Queen topic

Alan Spears

Quote from: Advwannabe on September 10, 2013, 03:16:39 AM
At your size and weight I would avoid the Hagon and anything else that doesn't have a remote reservoir.

Tigger has a long swingarm and no linkage so the shock has to work very hard. Once the oil overheats you are back to where you were with the stocker.

I'm about to replace my Hagon with a Wilbers tp try and eliminate this problem. You are welcome to grab my Hagon to give it a try, it will be cheap, but really you should just bite the bullet and do the job properly the first time.

Buy the time I add freight your Hagon may indeed be as expensive as the Wilbers.  Are you having traction/hop issues with the Hagon?

DavidR8

My suspension expertise extends to the ability to identify a shock absorber at 20 paces but the OP said that everything was maxed out on his original shock. I presume this to mean preload at amx and rebound damping at max.

If I understand how rebound damping works, having max rebound damping would encourage a 'hopping' effect because the shock can't rebound quickly enough to be ready to absorb the next impact making the rear bounce off the bumps instead of absorbing the impact.
2006 Girly, stone stock!

Alan Spears

Quote from: DavidR8 on September 10, 2013, 11:31:07 PM
My suspension expertise extends to the ability to identify a shock absorber at 20 paces but the OP said that everything was maxed out on his original shock. I presume this to mean preload at amx and rebound damping at max.

If I understand how rebound damping works, having max rebound damping would encourage a 'hopping' effect because the shock can't rebound quickly enough to be ready to absorb the next impact making the rear bounce off the bumps instead of absorbing the impact.

that makes since... I was given that advise from someone I believe is a pavement only rider. I just went out and cut the rebound in half, I will ride some rough roads tomorrow and maybe that will help until I save up about 700!

Bixxer Bob

Too much damping also causes "pump-down".   If you hit enough bumps in a row and what you described occurs, the travel gets less for every bump because the shock has no time to recover, eventually it locks at the minimum travel point and you now effectively have a rigid frame, no suspension.  As soon as you clear the bumps it clears itself until the next lot, and so on.....
I don't want to achieve immortality through prayer, I want to achieve it through not dying...

Alan Spears

Quote from: Bixxer Bob on September 11, 2013, 02:41:44 PM
Too much damping also causes "pump-down".   If you hit enough bumps in a row and what you described occurs, the travel gets less for every bump because the shock has no time to recover, eventually it locks at the minimum travel point and you now effectively have a rigid frame, no suspension.  As soon as you clear the bumps it clears itself until the next lot, and so on.....

My shock appears to be "working" as it does dampen. My question for you guys is how will a new fancier shock help?

Bixxer Bob

The most notable change after fitting my Hagon was a lot less ear-ache. 

Mainly due to the talking ballast getting a smoother ride..... :hat10
I don't want to achieve immortality through prayer, I want to achieve it through not dying...

JTT

 
Quote from: Bixxer Bob on September 11, 2013, 09:02:42 PM
The most notable change after fitting my Hagon was a lot less ear-ache. 

Mainly due to the talking ballast getting a smoother ride..... :hat10
:icon_lol:
2003 955i Tiger
2005 KLR
1970 T100C

Advwannabe

Yeah I'm still getting the juddering with the Hagon. I can dial it out a little by winding up the damping, but ride on a rough dirt road for more than about half an hour, the oil overheats and I'm back to no damping.

This is why I'm thinking of a more expensive remote reservoir shock
No good deed goes unpunished
02 Tigger
02 Blackbird
75 GT380
IBA #33180

DavidR8

Quote from: Alan Spears on September 11, 2013, 06:00:55 PM
Quote from: Bixxer Bob on September 11, 2013, 02:41:44 PM
Too much damping also causes "pump-down".   If you hit enough bumps in a row and what you described occurs, the travel gets less for every bump because the shock has no time to recover, eventually it locks at the minimum travel point and you now effectively have a rigid frame, no suspension.  As soon as you clear the bumps it clears itself until the next lot, and so on.....

My shock appears to be "working" as it does dampen. My question for you guys is how will a new fancier shock help?

It will certainly help drain dollars from the bank. I'm not an off road guy (except for today :icon_frown:) and our roads are reasonably smooth so a new shock is way off in the future for me.
2006 Girly, stone stock!