forks

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Paul_G

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Mar 10, 2011, 2:30:17 PM3/10/11
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I ordered my bomber with the standard forks, did I make a mistake?

are they worth the $1100 difference for the better set?

Bike will be used 95% street.

Paul G

Voicecoils

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Mar 10, 2011, 5:28:26 PM3/10/11
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The standard forks are perfectly fine on the street IMO.

If you are used to short travel suspension you'll be very impressed with the feeling of bottomless travel.

I have the single crown version on my Fighter. I find them plush, responsive & they have some adjustment.

The upgrade fork would be good to have for serious dirt riding or for anyone simply wanting the best full package.

Cheers!

Sent from my iPhone

Paul_G

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Mar 10, 2011, 5:44:37 PM3/10/11
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Great to hear that, Thanks

Paul G

Paul_G

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May 20, 2011, 1:07:08 PM5/20/11
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I bought silicon spray and pulled the fork seal open with my finger nail and gave a squirt, ...OMG the forks float with 0 sticking. :)  

John_W

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May 20, 2011, 4:21:59 PM5/20/11
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Cool. I will do that with mine this morning before my morning ride and see how they feel. :)

Paul_G

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May 20, 2011, 4:33:41 PM5/20/11
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I cleaned the seals well of any dirt 1st and used silicon, not WD-40 :)

before u do it pump up and down and feel how they stick before moving in jerks, then feel again after.

Now they are better than the WB-200 HD's....hehe

And while you have the silicon in hand hit the steering head and all pivot points on swing arm, shocks....etc

Paul G

John_W

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May 20, 2011, 4:46:45 PM5/20/11
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Too easy, will do.

Talking about lube, one problem spot I have come across is an annoying squeak from the rear shocker after about 1000 miles. It was quite hard to find exactly where it was coming from but I found the problem stemmed from the bottom pivot point.  The rear pivot has ball joint in centre flanked by bushes on both side that hold an O ring.  Once the bolt is removed, the flanged bushes can be removed from each side. You may need to get a thin screwdriver behind the flange on the bush to pop it out.  My O rings were completely dry. Once cleaned, lubed with O ring grease, and re assembled, the rear shock was perfectly quite again.

Paul_G

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Jun 6, 2011, 3:33:18 PM6/6/11
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The silicon does not last the day, I tried Mobil 1, 0-20 synthetic oil, a few drops under each seal and thats working great so far, two days and still super floater. Maybe a few drops per 50-100 miles.

Now where did I put my Pin-Point Oiler? 
http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=Pin-Point+Oiler

I know you prolly should be using grease but you would need to take apart the forks once a week and thats to much work. 

Paul G
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