Precisely, and I'll only sell to the top 10% of racers.It's so good that he feels guilty using it.
lol, i called them a year or two ago when i first took apart my 32 fit fork and i had asked them if the rebound/compression settings need to be open or closed when i bleed the damper (remember, FIRST TIME)... the guy originally told me open all the way, then proceeded to change his answer to closed.. later on, someone explained it to me (not @ fox), and not only did i feel kinda dumb (its kinda sorta common sense), but i doubt ill ever call them again.. better off on my own.The guy at Fox was like WHAT? Also he didn't seem to know the 40 was Air now....that sort of worried me a bit.
thanks for the input!
good to know.. im just worried about the tolerance issue that huck brought up with the bottom out system.. but i think he was talking about for a boxxer, and ive got a 40, so i should go check that stuffs out.Hack is being a bit dramatic. IF it came tuned properly it wouldn't be a problem. But I know both mine and hack's were underdamped, despite telling him VERY specifically that I wanted slow slow rebound and lots of compression damping. All in on both wasn't enough.
Is there a video or manual on how to do this? I cant find it on the Fox website.My advice is to start in the most linear setting, find compression settings that feel good for the first 9/10ths of travel, then if you're bottoming start moving the piston down to more progressive settings.
By most accounts, everyone seems really pleased with the new air 40s, and most of the other air forks as well. However, it would be swell if someone would make a "budget oriented", simple open bath coil fork that anyone can service in a matter of minutes. Yeah, it'd definitely be heavier, but if you're just recreationally bumping down the hill, I don't think the additional weight would be that big of a deal - especially if you can easily service the fork without special tools. Although I'm not familiar with the Dorado, so perhaps that's a quick & easy service procedure.
i guess you're right. The only video I can find shows it with the cartridge disassembled, and while it doesn't look challenging, it's not as simple as a monster T. It also works better than a monster T though, and most mountain bikers these days do the maintenance associated with higher products, so I'm not sure anybody's asking for more than a year long service life...I'm not sure if the 888 CR damper is the same as the one in my 55 CR, but it was no easy thing to service that system. I was thinking of open beer, drink half of beer, open top caps, dump oil out, cycle fork a couple times, refill with oil, replace top caps, drink remaining half of still cold beer, go ride (assuming seals and bushings are good of course).
I am..... I would like an annual service of fork at the max!so I'm not sure anybody's asking for more than a year long service life...
more than....ie two years. Avy's DHF is two years...but then you're running a 10lb fork with 65mm of offset.I am..... I would like an annual service of fork at the max!
That thing was miserable to service.I'm not sure if the 888 CR damper is the same as the one in my 55 CR, but it was no easy thing to service that system. I was thinking of open beer, drink half of beer, open top caps, dump oil out, cycle fork a couple times, refill with oil, replace top caps, drink remaining half of still cold beer, go ride (assuming seals and bushings are good of course).
All modern MX forks are twin chamber (closed cartridge base valve with spring-backed compensator piston up at the top, rebound rod at the bottom). No more modern open-bath forks as far as I know.^^
That's what the mechanic I took it too said as well (but with moar colorful descriptives). And now that you've chimed in, I was wondering about the MX fork world (which I know absolutely nothing about), and your thoughts on their damping systems. To Sandwich's point about the Monster T, I was wondering if you could just take a 888 chassis (which is a helluva lot lighter than a Monster T/Shiver chassis) and use a open bath system combined with a modern damping cart? So are MX forks basically modernized versions on a Monster T with decently tunable damping systems, or have they also gone the way of air or air/coil hybrids?
Basically. Just make sure all the oil is cycled out of the damper first, or make sure your oil height after matches your oil height before (once the damper is primed).^^
I guess I thought the VAR made it a little different from a pure open bath design, but sh!t, if I can replace the oil in the damper side as easy as the sping side, I will STFU now.
Moar dino-lube FTW.
KTM's XC-W series is aimed at trail riding and still uses an open bath damper. The reasoning is it has less stiction (plusher for slow riding over rough terrain) and it's easier to work on.No more modern open-bath forks as far as I know.
What VAR does is make the ceiling of the oil chamber an o-ring sealed disc 7" below the top cap instead of the top cap itself. This lets it use less oil for less weight. The 0-ring sealed disc moves up and down when you turn the knob which simulates changing the oil height. So it's just like the previous designs but uses less oil and can change the air volume with the turn of a knob instead of pouring oil in or out.I thought the VAR made it a little different from a pure open bath design.
Then I sit corrected. Been a while since I've done any KTM stuff. Into YZ/CR/RM 2-strokes these days.KTM's XC-W series is aimed at trail riding and still uses an open bath damper. The reasoning is it has less stiction (plusher for slow riding over rough terrain) and it's easier to work on.
I ran 2 from full linear position for a while, now I'm 2 from full progressive. I prefer it more progressive now, running 80psi. Couldn't be happier. As long as you keep up with maintenance, she will treat you right.Super easy. I put mine in the most linear position for now.
You seem to fall victim to this regularly (first CCDB, now this?). For future reference, anything that is not a digital electronic adjustment dial (eg. most car stereo volume controls) will generally have a defined start and stop point. If it doesn't stop at each end of adjustment something is almost certainly wrong/broken/missing. I wouldn't even consider "is it meant to be like this" on any bike stuff that doesn't have a digital readout/display.I just got a bnew takeoff 2013 40 RC2 off a Gambler. The HSC knob can go all the way closed, but keeps going 'out', going minus/fully open. Is anything wrong?
Wow, I ran full linear and 65 psi this last weekend and it felt pretty good. I thought it needed less air though. I'm 190lbs.I ran 2 from full linear position for a while, now I'm 2 from full progressive. I prefer it more progressive now, running 80psi. Couldn't be happier. As long as you keep up with maintenance, she will treat you right.
I've been using a 36 TALAS 180 on my Enduro bike for 3 years now and the regular maintenance I've done is removing the foot nuts, pulling the lowers down an inch, draining the oil out, and using a syringe to squirt fresh oil in. This is so easy and quick that you can do it every few weeks and it keeps the inners clean and lubed. Once a year the seals start weeping so I replace them which involves a full lower removal, cleaning, greasing.What maintenance needs to be done regularly?