
Originally Posted by
FruitLooPs
Whats the deal with these crazy forks on that motoczysz anyhow, flexing and what not sounds mighty unconventional to me (granted I have NFI about these things). Robert Taylor, what say you, is this the future direction of front suspenders?
The Motoczysz front end still has forks but instead of the springs and damping being inside the forks it's all done with a shock (very similar to rear shock in a monoshock chassis) mounted between the forks. It uses roller bearings inside the forks and the whole assembly is very rigid with very low stiction.
The problem with that sort of system is that there is virtually no feel - the rider can't tell what's happening when he braking etc. Flex = feel. So they design in flex. Because they design in the flex they have total control over how much feedback the rider gets etc.
One of the main reasons for how great the front end feels is actually the engine. With the vast majority of bikes around the crankshaft lies across the bike. The MotoCzysz has the crankshaft running along the bikes centre line. That's not the unusual part though. The engine is split in 2 with each crankshaft rotating in a different direction. This has the effect of cancelling out any affect the engine has on the chassis.
In most bikes, when you throttle off a part of what makes the bike dip at the front is the torque reaction of the engine slowing. That's just 1 of the effects the engine has on the bike. Also, torque reactions are happening thousands of times a second (eg each power pulse from the engine) so putting that lot into the suspension isn't helpful. Remove those and you've removed a very annoying force that people don't notice until they're not there, freeing the suspension to deal with what it's meant to.
Zen wisdom: No matter what happens, somebody will find a way to take it too seriously. - obviously had KB in mind when he came up with that gem
Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity
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