Quantcast

New Whip? New toys for the dependable steed?

konifere

Monkey
Dec 20, 2021
557
686
I did not show the underside, but it's rolling on ball bearings.

The balancing version could come later on, it's just to motivate me to do push-ups.
 
Last edited:
Feb 21, 2020
855
1,207
SoCo Western Slope
Had a Push coil kit kicking around, finally put it in a 170mm Fox 36.

Went up a spring rate from recommended ( to 50# green) and have 40 psi in the air bumper. Feels pretty solid on the trails, ran a rough one today with a few drops and jumps, still had 35mm of travel left. :thumb:

I "re-gulped" the air bumper to pretty much max negative.
Can't even feel when it kicks in, nice an smooth.

push coil.jpg
 

konifere

Monkey
Dec 20, 2021
557
686
I prefer coil shocks, but air forks. I went riding rough stuff today with my CC Helm Coil, and on drops and bigger hits, the linearity of the coil surprised me a few times when I was deep in the travel. The spring rate is perfect for 95% of the time as the next step up is oversprung, but it was a good reminder of why I prefer air forks in those situations. I remember bolting back my DVO Diamond last year after using the Helm and it felt like meeting my best friend that I haven't seen in a long time.
 

SuboptimusPrime

Turbo Monkey
Aug 18, 2005
1,660
1,638
NorCack
I prefer coil shocks, but air forks. I went riding rough stuff today with my CC Helm Coil, and on drops and bigger hits, the linearity of the coil surprised me a few times when I was deep in the travel. The spring rate is perfect for 95% of the time as the next step up is oversprung, but it was a good reminder of why I prefer air forks in those situations. I remember bolting back my DVO Diamond last year after using the Helm and it felt like meeting my best friend that I haven't seen in a long time.
Agree with this--except I did have a progressive coil spring in my old boxxer and that was pretty great. If there were more options like this I would definitely consider. For folks riding really flat trails without many giant compressions I think coil is awesome for a fork. That said, my Ohlins air forks leave nothing to be desired..
 

slimshady

¡Mira, una ardilla!
IMG-20230811-WA0038.jpg


3D printed the two biggest volume spacers for the rear shock. Fox wanted 25 US rubles for a set of 5 (of which I didn't have any use for the smaller 3) and had them printed for less than 3 bucks and some spare time.

Here is the link if anyone needs them:


EDIT: Here are the Fox 34 volume spacers just in case:

 
Last edited:
Feb 21, 2020
855
1,207
SoCo Western Slope
I prefer coil shocks, but air forks. I went riding rough stuff today with my CC Helm Coil, and on drops and bigger hits, the linearity of the coil surprised me a few times when I was deep in the travel. The spring rate is perfect for 95% of the time as the next step up is oversprung, but it was a good reminder of why I prefer air forks in those situations. I remember bolting back my DVO Diamond last year after using the Helm and it felt like meeting my best friend that I haven't seen in a long time.
I have used a Vorsprung smashpot as well. It was good, HBO is a great feature, but the air assist in the PUSH kit is way more tunable. It also kicks in sooner. Depending on pressure, the air assist starts at around 100mm of travel for a 170mm fork. Never feel those unexpected oh-shit-there-goes-all-the travel moments.

I think the prefect combo would be both, a HBO + air assist to dial in the spring rate and for fine tuning when riding the bike park vs trails. Like what Avalanche does with the hybrid coil/air setup.

The other thing you lose with a coil setup is the lower leg ramp effect from the air spring side. The sealed volume is much larger, similar to the damper side, so there is no big ramp at the end.
 

mykel

closer to Periwinkle
Apr 19, 2013
5,151
3,874
sw ontario canada
...The other thing you lose with a coil setup is the lower leg ramp effect from the air spring side. The sealed volume is much larger, similar to the damper side, so there is no big ramp at the end.
This is why I love the coil kit. I just do not get along with the deep stroke ramp up. I find it kicks too much, but I guess this is the "pop" people like about air suspension. I was going to do the Avy hybrid, but the Lyrik chassis has limits on the coil weight Craig could install. I would have ended up using too much air assist, so I went Smashpot.

meh.
 

konifere

Monkey
Dec 20, 2021
557
686
I've heard Sickline suspension solves this by drilling through the threads and shock body then passing a longer bolt through it all.


/dodging @bullcrew 's oily drill bits :D
 

Happymtb.fr

Turbo Monkey
Feb 9, 2016
1,930
1,288
SWE
I got a Novya shock from Novy Parts to try out today. I hear good things so I’m looking forward to it.

View attachment 199115
Does every customer get its name engraved on the ifp cap?

I kind of wanted one but it doesn't fit my Ransom. The EXT storia is nevertheless doing fine so far. It just that servicing the EXT will be more costly in the long run...
 

HeadMaster

Chimp
Feb 8, 2019
58
195
Stripped the crown and stem. Got a silver spank hub and set of house rims on the way. Few more odds and ends and she’ll be done! But need to ride this weekend

IMG_5876.jpeg
 

Happymtb.fr

Turbo Monkey
Feb 9, 2016
1,930
1,288
SWE
Zee cranks on my boy's Ransom. Not every day one sees bash guard... these come from far down my spare parts drawer. They will be perfect for this frame without iscg-tabs
20230823_212436.jpg

Removing the previous dub cranks was easy thanks to the good advices gathered here. Cheers
 

Inclag

Turbo Monkey
Sep 9, 2001
2,752
442
MA
No pics, but;

  • Dremeled the dish out of the piston of my Boxxer Select to remove the silly platform that RS for some reason builds into all their stuff
  • Concocted a ~slightly higher cst cartridge oil by doing a 50:50 mix
  • Added moar shims to the piston stack to actually attempt to have HSC
  • Regreased all the sliding o rings
  • Soaked the foam rings in and added SAE 32k way oil to the top side of the air piston
No DH time yet, but initial reaction is that the fork feels like an actual true suspension system vs an air spring with rebound control after the initial driveway bounce around.

Future ideas to optimize further;
  • See if the Charger 3 sealhead can be installed as there is a lot of drag
  • Assess low friction o-rings or o-rings coatings to reduce IFP drag
  • If time and patients permits, mill a high flow piston and needle valve LSC and futz around with Shim restacktor...
Edit

Just did a quick local hot lap. Mostly trail stuff, but a few good root filled sections with cambers. True test will be at the mountain, but huge difference in front wheel grip and turning through rocks/roots. Never realized how much the front tire would disconnect from the ground for a few milliseconds due to the 'platform' inherent in the cartridge.
 
Last edited:

toodles

ridiculously corgi proportioned
Aug 24, 2004
5,574
4,855
Australia
Just did a quick local hot lap. Mostly trail stuff, but a few good root filled sections with cambers. True test will be at the mountain, but huge difference in front wheel grip and turning through rocks/roots. Never realized how much the front tire would disconnect from the ground for a few milliseconds due to the 'platform' inherent in the cartridge.
I finally got my Zeb bushings sized and aligned. Yeah - gonna admit probably should have done that earlier... the difference in front wheel traction is crazy. I did rebuild the damper at the same time, so maybe that contributed but sheesh.
 

mykel

closer to Periwinkle
Apr 19, 2013
5,151
3,874
sw ontario canada
I finally got my Zeb bushings sized and aligned. Yeah - gonna admit probably should have done that earlier... the difference in front wheel traction is crazy. I did rebuild the damper at the same time, so maybe that contributed but sheesh.
The damaged nerves in my hands really liked having the bushing done.
 

SuboptimusPrime

Turbo Monkey
Aug 18, 2005
1,660
1,638
NorCack
I'm a believer in bushing work as well. When my Ohlins 36 went in for it's annual rebuild, they sized the bushings (I did not request this and was not charged more than the rebuild fee). Obviously hard to parse out the impact of the service from the bushing work but to me it feels even better than it did when new. I'm also running substantially more air pressure now which to me suggests it's moving more freely.
 

toodles

ridiculously corgi proportioned
Aug 24, 2004
5,574
4,855
Australia
A local place here in Oz did mine. You can buy the burnishing/sizing tools if you want to give it a crack, else I'd just check the suspension tuners near you.

*edit* just checked the tool pricing. You'd want to be rich to buy them yourself.
 

buckoW

Turbo Monkey
Mar 1, 2007
3,792
4,754
Champery, Switzerland
Exactly. I *almost* still have a pro shop of tools, but not suspension tools. Way, way too specific to make sense, as we are riding bigger and bigger suspension platforms.
You can resize the bushings 4 or 5 times with good results before needing to change out the bushings , imo. You’d also only need one for a 36 right? It could be justifiable with the amount you ride.
 

rideit

Bob the Builder
Aug 24, 2004
23,471
11,632
In the cleavage of the Tetons
Ironically, there is one less than a few hundred feet from me. But it is in the workshop of our next door neighbor, who died this spring. Probably will be hauled off, and the property developed. The old man was awesome, a Navajo that bought the house and property in the 50’s. It’s the largest contiguous property left in East Jackson, probably worth over 10 million as dirt.
There is an amazing old barn, absolutely filled to the rafters with stuff. He was a welder, fabricator, small engine guy. Absolutely brilliant, with barely a high school education.
He would have built anything for me, we brought him over fresh sourdough, soup, and butter all through the pandemic.
 

Jm_

sled dog's bollocks
Jan 14, 2002
19,091
9,747
AK
Ironically, there is one less than a few hundred feet from me. But it is in the workshop of our next door neighbor, who died this spring. Probably will be hauled off, and the property developed. The old man was awesome, a Navajo that bought the house and property in the 50’s. It’s the largest contiguous property left in East Jackson, probably worth over 10 million as dirt.
There is an amazing old barn, absolutely filled to the rafters with stuff. He was a welder, fabricator, small engine guy. Absolutely brilliant, with barely a high school education.
He would have built anything for me, we brought him over fresh sourdough, soup, and butter all through the pandemic.
Not if you steal it first.