I have a near pristine set of 1998 SIDs in the classic blue. They came on my Zixang, which I removed and have had tucked away for a couple years now.
I'm now thinking cutting off the crown and putting on a 1" Judy crown so I can use it on my Bonty.
I checked the air pressure last night and to my surprise, both legs still held around 50 psi, which is about what my weight range suggests according to the manual.
I topped them off, and pressed down on the steerer, but they feel like they have a lot of stiction, meaning it takes a lot of force to initially compress the fork.
Reducing the air pressure helps a little bit, but not by a lot.
I've never used these forks before, but have had plenty of Judys with Englunds and later model SIDs, neither of which seem to require this much force to compress initially.
Is this normal behavior for the '98 SID? I'm wondering what could make them feel more plush. Perhaps a firmer negative spring?
Can anyone also comment on the '98 SID vs a 2003+ SID Race or Team with Dual Air?
Thanks.
I'm now thinking cutting off the crown and putting on a 1" Judy crown so I can use it on my Bonty.
I checked the air pressure last night and to my surprise, both legs still held around 50 psi, which is about what my weight range suggests according to the manual.
I topped them off, and pressed down on the steerer, but they feel like they have a lot of stiction, meaning it takes a lot of force to initially compress the fork.
Reducing the air pressure helps a little bit, but not by a lot.
I've never used these forks before, but have had plenty of Judys with Englunds and later model SIDs, neither of which seem to require this much force to compress initially.
Is this normal behavior for the '98 SID? I'm wondering what could make them feel more plush. Perhaps a firmer negative spring?
Can anyone also comment on the '98 SID vs a 2003+ SID Race or Team with Dual Air?
Thanks.