My 2012 has seen about half a year of chairlift/alps riding (a lot of which was in the mud, with lots of pressure washing) and it's still on the original seals. Also the "stupidly fat" stanchions are only 2mm larger than the current 888, which is a negligible difference and not enough to offset 2 extra sealing lips per stanchion (my experience after riding both forks).How long are new Fox 40 seals lasting? If they're as long lasting as 888 seals, great. Until then IMO any miniscule amount of stiction saved(needed for stupidly fat stanchions)is barely worth the trade off for blown seals. If they're lasting longer than the older ones(as I'd hope)then great I'd definitely be keen to try them
The other benefit which I quite like is that you seem to be able to remove the stanchion for servicing/cleaning and reinstall it without damaging the seal (which is still a pressure seal on the lower side). In both marzocchi and rockshox forks, doing this will result in pressure seal leaks >50% of the time in my experience, I'm not entirely sure why.
Nope, and two things make your comparison apples-to-oranges:Shiat, I thought the old amount was conservative. Proof's in the riding I guess. Anyone notice their forks are faster(less damped)at the end of a decent or real rocky run?
The first is, unlike every other MTB fork I've seen, Fox use shock fluid in their FIT cartridges (which has a VI of 300+ and thus is much more temperature stable than most fork fluids). And the second is that the cartridge separates oil and air, so you aren't going to get foaming issues changing damping consistency.
It's interesting baca262 mentions his 888 was affected by this in rebound because that is logically where any foamed oil would build up on a damper with rebound at the top. I haven't felt that personally, but I suspected the opposite effect was true on the stock Boxxer because the oil level (and thus any foam) occurs near the opening of the compression damper.