1- Just replacing the fork springs and fresh oil along with deleting the anti-dive with channeled block off plates.
2- Replacing the fork springs and installing emulators, still deleting the anti-dive with non channeled block off plates.
I am not sure of the value of the emulators for a bike that will mostly be ridden around town and maybe get 1k miles a year if I'm lucky. For the fork springs, I am aware of the Progressives, but I think a straight rate may be better? I am not looking to do a fork swap. What are the recommendations on good fork springs and oil weight/level settings? I am about 190 lbs and always solo riding.
For the rear, I am looking to replace the shock. Right now, it looks like it is between the Hagon, Wilbers, or Penske. All are single adjustable, with the Hagon being the cheapest and the Penske and Wilbers about the same price. The Penske and Wilbers seem to have a good rep, but the Hagon seems to be hit or miss. I don't mind spending a little more to get a superior product, short of a full on "race" shock. I would appreciate any real would experience that is out there. By the way, I had started a thread about a year ago, but it seems gone, so here is a pic of the bike before tear down. Nothing like the sound of a stroker with chambers to go with the sweet GS body lines!
Mark
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