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Thread: Benifits of USD forks?

  1. #31
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    Would an extra bush between the upper and lower ones fix it?
    Quote Originally Posted by Dean View Post
    Ok im coming out of my closet just this one time , I too kinda have a curvy figure which makes it worse beacuse im a guy. Well the waist kinda goes in and the bum pushes out. When I was in college the girls in my year would slap me on the arse and squeeze because apparently it is firm, tight... I wear jeans
    .....if I find this as a signature Ill hunt you down, serious, capice?

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by HDTboy View Post
    Would an extra bush between the upper and lower ones fix it?
    Maybe from a rigidity perspective, but three bushes on a pair of disimilar tubes in a bending moment environment spells lots a stiction, so sadly no....

  3. #33
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    I should've known that
    Quote Originally Posted by Dean View Post
    Ok im coming out of my closet just this one time , I too kinda have a curvy figure which makes it worse beacuse im a guy. Well the waist kinda goes in and the bum pushes out. When I was in college the girls in my year would slap me on the arse and squeeze because apparently it is firm, tight... I wear jeans
    .....if I find this as a signature Ill hunt you down, serious, capice?

  4. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by HDTboy View Post
    I should've known that
    Don't beat yourself up! Most of the time I enjoy your questions, except for the one that require lotsa typing late at night

  5. #35
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    Is it late yet?

    I understand that cartridge forks are better than damper rod forks, but I don't understand why. And where do I mount a fork oil reservoir on my bike?
    Quote Originally Posted by Dean View Post
    Ok im coming out of my closet just this one time , I too kinda have a curvy figure which makes it worse beacuse im a guy. Well the waist kinda goes in and the bum pushes out. When I was in college the girls in my year would slap me on the arse and squeeze because apparently it is firm, tight... I wear jeans
    .....if I find this as a signature Ill hunt you down, serious, capice?

  6. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by HDTboy View Post
    Is it late yet?

    I understand that cartridge forks are better than damper rod forks, but I don't understand why. And where do I mount a fork oil reservoir on my bike?
    You're a cruel bugger, Gav!!
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  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pussy View Post
    You're a cruel bugger, Gav!!
    No Puss he's a count!

  8. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pussy View Post
    You're a cruel bugger, Gav!!
    Actually there is no 'o' in that is there.....

  9. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by TDC View Post
    The USD fork has two bushes mounted at a fixed length of about 250mm apart in the upper tube, the lower bush is at the bottom of the upper tube and is quite poorly supported.
    Not all USD Showa forks have fixed bushes, on most of their forks the upper bush is mounted on the stanchion so the bush moves up the slider as the forks compress. KYB, Soki and Ohlins use the fixed bush, Marzocchi use a sliding bush as do WP on the Roma fork.

  10. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by TDC View Post
    Sort of but don't underestimate how much the freedom to put larger more capable cartridges has done to front end performance! For this reason alone the other trade offs are well worth it!
    Has it never been possible to fit 25mm cartridges in conventional forks?????

  11. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by TDC View Post
    The real benefit is when fitted a cartridge damper it does not suffer the same undesirable critical flow problems that conventional forks do when fitted with a cartridge damper. Simply the oil on the bottom of a conventional fork has to pass between the cartridge and the fork tube in the conventional design in comparatively large volumes, this imparts undesirable damping "artifacts" in to the action of the fork and limits the maximum size of the cartridge that can be fitted for a given fork tube diameter. The USD fork does not have these problems and as such was used in racing, them became fashionable, now its probably more expensive to make a conventional fork due to the numbers game.....
    Why is the oil flowing into the fork from the cartridge comparitively large compared to a USD fork, how much damping does this create, is it measurable on a dyno?

  12. #42
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    Quote Originally Posted by Robert Taylor View Post
    A negative of USD forks is that because of the bushing positions in the upper tubes ( one at the bottom of the upper tubes and one above the lower triple clamp ) they deflect off centre due to the tubes being distorted under braking loads or abrupt bump deflection. That causes friction so it is not all a bed of roses......
    True, but all forks flex under braking and turning whether they are USD or conventional, it's not ideal from a stiction point of view but is a necessary evil for feel, if you made a set of forks that didn't flex at all nobody would like them.

  13. #43
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    Quote Originally Posted by R6_kid View Post
    skidmarks answer: the zxr has them and the cbr doesnt, hondas are gay therefore USD for the win.
    Pretty much.

  14. #44
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    Quote Originally Posted by JD Racing View Post
    Not all USD Showa forks have fixed bushes, on most of their forks the upper bush is mounted on the stanchion so the bush moves up the slider as the forks compress. KYB, Soki and Ohlins use the fixed bush, Marzocchi use a sliding bush as do WP on the Roma fork.
    Agreed, it was the majority I was representing for the purposes of discussion.

  15. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by JD Racing View Post
    Has it never been possible to fit 25mm cartridges in conventional forks?????
    Technically yes but practically not so easy see next

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