pvduke
Husqvarna
Pro Class
here's a lil trick to help get the most from your front boinger...
1- plop her up on the stand and yank the front wheel
2- re-insert the axle only with the right clamp nuts (throttle side) finger tight so you can slide it. how does it fit? is there a miss match due to one leg longer than the other?
3- loosen the left leg (clutch lever side) clamp bolts. slide that leg up or down so the axle can now go into the hole un-restricted.
4- retorque the clamp pinch bolts (to spec or a tick less, uber-important here!!!) and plunge the protrusion at the top of the clamp with a caliper and record your findings.
5- clean seals and clamps, grease the axle, reinstall the front wheel and 'set the axle' as per George et. al..
this helps with stiction and what not in the small n choppy stuff. what happens is most of the time the fork OAL is not the same. and we set the ride height up at the top clamp using the ring on the leg by the cap, making the protrusion equal. if your axle is not sliding in all by itself (i.e. ya gota pound it or wiggle) the leg lentghs are not equal, nor will the damping action be. re-perform this if you service your fork- as you should after the first couple tanks on a new bike. this also makes it WAY easier to service a flat on the trail. every little bit helps when it comes to fork action.
mreeep braaap baaarooooooop!
1- plop her up on the stand and yank the front wheel
2- re-insert the axle only with the right clamp nuts (throttle side) finger tight so you can slide it. how does it fit? is there a miss match due to one leg longer than the other?
3- loosen the left leg (clutch lever side) clamp bolts. slide that leg up or down so the axle can now go into the hole un-restricted.
4- retorque the clamp pinch bolts (to spec or a tick less, uber-important here!!!) and plunge the protrusion at the top of the clamp with a caliper and record your findings.
5- clean seals and clamps, grease the axle, reinstall the front wheel and 'set the axle' as per George et. al..
this helps with stiction and what not in the small n choppy stuff. what happens is most of the time the fork OAL is not the same. and we set the ride height up at the top clamp using the ring on the leg by the cap, making the protrusion equal. if your axle is not sliding in all by itself (i.e. ya gota pound it or wiggle) the leg lentghs are not equal, nor will the damping action be. re-perform this if you service your fork- as you should after the first couple tanks on a new bike. this also makes it WAY easier to service a flat on the trail. every little bit helps when it comes to fork action.
mreeep braaap baaarooooooop!