hedgehog":60ej6x2k said:But manufacturers do it in different ways. Take a Rockshox Motion Control fork with Floodgate adjust and dual air springs - you have dual air chambers which can be used to tune initial stroke sensitivity, a low speed compression damper which can be used to tame brake dave and bob; Flood gate adjust to set when the fork overcomes the compression damping, and two stage rebound adjust.
Of course in the end it is how you like it, but I'd experiment: there maybe a better set up which uses the suspension (and the traction you talk about) much more efficiently.
FluffyChicken":3sc4hde0 said:Andy B":3sc4hde0 said:Sag should be set @ 30% on forks and shocks whilst sat on the bike in your riding gear...
Before or after breakfast ?
[/quote]MikeD":1klkde5r said:I'm sorry, but either you're measuring the sag wrong or you're measuring the air pressure wrong. There's no way on earth you'll get 25% sag out of that bike with 300psi in the rear shock unless you weigh the far side of 20 stone. I'm assuming that you don't weigh over 20 stone, of course. If you do, my apologies.
(Air pressure isn't preload, by the way, you're directly affecting the spring rate. The collar on a coil spring _is_ preload but doesn't affect the spring rate, which is a property inherent to the spring -- the only way to change it is to replace the spring).