Question is: Are there any downsides to upping the preload to this degree?
Yes you are adding energy into the spring so any chance the spring gets to re;ease this energy it will such as a bump in the road, then you will be asking the rebound to do extra work ...the energy added from the bump in compression PLUS the extra energy you adding into the spring .... so you rebound will be faster it will feel a bit kicky up front and over say ripples round a swee[er the front will eventually lose the plot and you will stand the bike up and have another go !
Also, with more weight forward, I take it you've gotta be more committed to the throttle and get weight on the back end again once in to a corner? I'm thinking that a front end slide would be more likely with this set up.
If the rear spring is to soft then the wieght transfer will to the rear will be more as the spine less spring stuggles to support you and the shift in cog
This will take the wieght of the front , the front will then tend to drift towards the outside of the curve and with it being a bit lively anyways ,, anytime the tyre aint touching the ground it will move towards the outside of the corner ,,, try doing a wheely while cranked over to see what i mean
Untill you get the springs dont worry about a thing, then with stiffer springs matched to your weight get the bike so it tracks the idea line round a corner...( with stiffer springs often people add a shim to the rebound shim stack to slow the shaft down due to the stiffer spring )
Stephen
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
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