Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Old GS handling limitations
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by zuluwiz View Postsigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
-
Originally posted by glib View PostSteve went into some detail just down the page ...
- Click on the "Forum" button in the upper left corner.
- Click on the "Forum Actions" tab, then the "General Settings" option.
- Scroll down a bit to the blue line that says "Thread Display Options"
- In the "Thread Display Mode:" option, select "Linear - Oldest First"
- In the "Number of Posts to Show per Page" option, select "Show 40 Posts per Page"
- Scroll down to the bottom, select "Save Changes"
You can now read threads as they happen, not jumping all over the place, and witn 40 posts showing on each page, there is a LOT less page-flipping when reading longer threads. This is only a drawback if you have a slower internet connection that might take a while to load longer threads, especially if they include a lot of pictures.
.sigpic
mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
#1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
#2 son: 1980 GS1000G
Family Portrait
Siblings and Spouses
Mom's first ride
Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
(Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)
Comment
-
Originally posted by Steve View PostEvidently you still have your setting on the forum defaults, which are VERY hard to read.
- Click on the "Forum" button in the upper left corner.
- Click on the "Forum Actions" tab, then the "General Settings" option.
- Scroll down a bit to the blue line that says "Thread Display Options"
- In the "Thread Display Mode:" option, select "Linear - Oldest First"
- In the "Number of Posts to Show per Page" option, select "Show 40 Posts per Page"
- Scroll down to the bottom, select "Save Changes"
You can now read threads as they happen, not jumping all over the place, and witn 40 posts showing on each page, there is a LOT less page-flipping when reading longer threads. This is only a drawback if you have a slower internet connection that might take a while to load longer threads, especially if they include a lot of pictures.
.sigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
Comment
-
Forum LongTimerBard Award Winner
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Oct 2003
- 17441
- Indianapolis
You also have to remember that, since time immemorial, Suzuki has generously provided employment as test riders for retired horse racing jockeys and anorexic ballerinas.
Thanks to the sensitive derrieres of these brave flyweights, some Suzuki motorcycles have arrived on these shores sagging through 2/3 of their suspension travel under the weight of the bike alone, with no rider, fuel, or luggage aboard, and to this very day, almost all arrive sadly undersprung.
Anyway, the tire pressure recommendations on vintage Suzukis were based on... well, no one knows exactly. But the pressures in the manuals and on the frame stickers are extremely low, especially with modern tires. Even back in the day, as mentioned earlier, corn-fed American (and wurst-fed European) journalists had to increase the tire pressures to get reasonable handling.
The "10% rise" test Steve mentioned is a great way to sort out the best pressures for your riding and your tires.
Tangential rant: Car manufacturers do the same thing too -- in order to make their cars feel cushy and smooth, the tire pressures on the door jamb stickers are often ridiculously low. It's less common nowadays since mileage is such an overriding concern. If you remember the Firestone tire/Ford Explorer debacle a while back, one root cause of the failure was that the factory tire pressure was something ridiculous like 28psi so the truck wouldn't ride like, y'know, a truck. After just a few months of the usual complete neglect, the tires would be down to 23-24psi or worse. Combine that with Firestone's nonexistent quality control at the time and you had a recipe for overheating, delamination, and blowouts.Last edited by bwringer; 03-20-2018, 09:42 AM.1983 GS850G, Cosmos Blue.
2005 KLR685, Aztec Pink - Turd II.3, the ReReReTurdening
2015 Yamaha FJ-09, Magma Red Power Corrupts...
Eat more venison.
Please provide details. The GSR Hive Mind is nearly omniscient, but not yet clairvoyant.
Celeriter equita, converteque saepe.
SUPPORT THIS SITE! DONATE TODAY!
Co-host of "The Riding Obsession" sport-touring motorcycling podcast at tro.bike!
Comment
-
Downs
When I moved up to 34 rear and 32 front on the GS the bike handled much better than it had before.
Comment
-
Originally posted by bwringer View PostYou also have to remember that, since time immemorial, Suzuki has generously provided employment as test riders for retired horse racing jockeys and anorexic ballerinas.
Thanks to the sensitive derrieres of these brave flyweights, some Suzuki motorcycles have arrived on these shores sagging through 2/3 of their suspension travel under the weight of the bike alone, with no rider, fuel, or luggage aboard, and to this very day, almost all arrive sadly undersprung.
Anyway, the tire pressure recommendations on vintage Suzukis were based on... well, no one knows exactly. But the pressures in the manuals and on the frame stickers are extremely low, especially with modern tires. Even back in the day, as mentioned earlier, corn-fed American (and wurst-fed European) journalists had to increase the tire pressures to get reasonable handling.
The "10% rise" test Steve mentioned is a great way to sort out the best pressures for your riding and your tires.
Tangential rant: Car manufacturers do the same thing too -- in order to make their cars feel cushy and smooth, the tire pressures on the door jamb stickers are often ridiculously low. It's less common nowadays since mileage is such an overriding concern. If you remember the Firestone tire/Ford Explorer debacle a while back, one root cause of the failure was that the factory tire pressure was something ridiculous like 28psi so the truck wouldn't ride like, y'know, a truck. After just a few months of the usual complete neglect, the tires would be down to 23-24psi or worse. Combine that with Firestone's nonexistent quality control at the time and you had a recipe for overheating, delamination, and blowouts.sigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
Comment
-
Back on post #33 in this thread, I mentioned that I had broken a spring retainer on one of my Ohlins shocks:
"I broke the spring retainer on one of my Ohlins. I ordered it from the only place I could find it which is in the UK so it'll be at least two weeks before I get them back on the bike."
Fortunately I had just rebuilt my Works Performance shocks so I installed them. However, I wanted to take the opportunity to compliment the supplier of the new spring retainer. Sadly, the first order was lost in the mail somewhere between the UK and my address. The seller, Ben, owner of Classic and Vintage Suspension, contacted me immediately upon getting my message requesting status. He offered to cancel the sale, (it was through Ebay), and ship another spring retainer if it didn't arrive in a time frame that satisfied me. Having already installed my Works shocks, I had the luxury of waiting and didn't want Ben to incur unnecessary costs so we waited to see if the package would arrive. Ben contacted me regularly--even from his vacation to this side of the pond--to make sure I was ok with waiting and continued to offer a refund. I could tell he is an honorable guy and we agreed to wait a bit longer. A week ago Ben messaged that he would refund my money and send me a replacement NO charge--and to just make a charitable contribution of my choosing for the value of the sale. I received the package yesterday and installed the spring retainer this morning (the clean one on the right in the picture).
So please consider Ben Penny at www.classicandvintagesuspension.co.uk to be a reliable and honorable resource.
Ohlins w new spring retainer by Gary L, on FlickrLast edited by glib; 04-22-2018, 01:07 PM.sigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
Comment
-
80GS850GBob
I've gotta ask.....it was mentioned here that measuring suspension travel was the ticket to setting sag, front and rear. On the rear, where the swing arm can yield 5" of travel but the shocks are an actual 3" of travel, is the more accurate way of checking rear travel sag "on" the shocks, or by measuring suspension travel?
I was taught the old school way of a zip tie on the fork tube or the rear shock shaft....measure the free travel spec on the shock unweighted, note the amount of movement once a load is placed(rider...riders) and see the difference.
Comment
-
Originally posted by 80GS850GBob View PostI've gotta ask.....it was mentioned here that measuring suspension travel was the ticket to setting sag, front and rear. On the rear, where the swing arm can yield 5" of travel but the shocks are an actual 3" of travel, is the more accurate way of checking rear travel sag "on" the shocks, or by measuring suspension travel?
I was taught the old school way of a zip tie on the fork tube or the rear shock shaft....measure the free travel spec on the shock unweighted, note the amount of movement once a load is placed(rider...riders) and see the difference.sigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
Comment
-
80GS850GBob
Agreed....front axle travel is linear to the shock...rear travel is not since the rear shock(s) are in a lever relationship and not linear....think fulcrum point(s).
Comment
-
80GS850GBob
Originally posted by 80GS850GBob View PostAgreed....front axle travel is linear to the shock...rear travel is not since the rear shock(s) are in a lever relationship and not linear....think fulcrum point(s).
Comment
-
Originally posted by 80GS850GBob View PostAgreed....front axle travel is linear to the shock...rear travel is not since the rear shock(s) are in a lever relationship and not linear....think fulcrum point(s).sigpic
1983 GS1100ES (Bought July 2014)
1983 GS1100E (Bought July 2014)
1985 GS700ES (Bought June 2015) Sold
On Christ the Solid Rock I Stand
All Other Ground is Sinking Sand
Comment
Comment