
Originally Posted by
Robert Taylor
This is the BIG misonception that many people have....''I dont ride well enough to even consider Ohlins''. Most of our customers are just like you, they want improved ride height / chassis pitch control but also with that they can have dramatically improved bump absorption. Thats what Ohlins provides, and to a much better level than the supposedly budget brands. They are made to improve the ride irrespective of what speed you travel at.
The other big misnomer is price, we can provide at starting at $1099 incl, compare that to Works Performance, Progressive brand etc etc. Maybe a little dearer but the difference in ride quality, ride height control, quality, longevity, servicability and backup is like being on another planet. Race Tech shocks whilst pretty good are more expensive as they are low volume build. We dont currently import them because of the pricing issue.
Progressives are a 1970s solution but we dont live in the 70s any more, and its a band aid. Like I said in my previous post at least 50% of the problem is poor hydraulic control, addressed by fitting Race Tech emulators.
Currently Progressive brand springs may be cheap out of the States, aided and abetted by their extremely thin margins that would be unsustainable here, the current exchange rate and that you wont get charged gst on entry, a real slap in the face to NZ businesses who pay gst. Money going to faceless Yanks instead of to New Zealand businesses employing New Zealanders and putting money back into the local economy. When the last business in NZ closes because of so much offshore buying then I hope someone will be on hand to turn the lights out......
Anyway off my soapbox, have a good look at those Progressive brand springs, theres another reason they are cheap, the finish on them is criminally rough, there are very minimal polish finishing processes to bring the finish to a smooth polish. So the rubbing inside the fork tubes is quite intense, exacerbated by theirridiculously long length. Thoroughbred spring manufacturers and suspension companies will use highly polished springs that are as short as possible ( but still with enough stroke integrity ) and long preload spacer tubes. So friction is severely reduced as is the likelihood of chards of metal slowly being ''polished'' off the springs by the inner fork tube walls. These chards being collected and embedded in the outer teflon coatings of the fork bushings.
If decision is based on price then thats the customers call, but to ''add cheapness'' there are a whole load of corners cut. Its like the anaolgy of buying a plastic bucket, todays examples are like tissue paper and dont have the iongevity that they had before the bean counters and mainland Asians took more control of the world...
If you were placed on 2 identical motorcycles, one with those dodgy Progressive springs and another with Emulators and linear wind springs and then rode each I know which one you would choose. It indeed costs a lot more to do it properly but the difference is HUGE.
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