Well..... I think I can fairly say that in NZ I have personally had way more experience than anyone here re the whole cartridge thing. Years back we were simply respringing and reoiling, then we started fitting high flow preloading piston kits to the predominantly 20mm cartridges we still see in oem cartridges today. Sourced from a road race specific supplier in the States I was told I would never need to change the settings. It was in effect intimated that the settings were perfect, if I can be a little impolite that turned out to be a load of old bollocks and we laboriously improved the settings to match our tracks.
Bumps are indeed bumps, its just that we have a higher percentage of bumpy roads and tracks and therefore a lower percentage of smooth groomed roads and tracks.
Then we sourced from the same supplier full 20mm cartridge kits, sold quite a few and won a few national champs with them. Once the settings were optimised they worked pretty good but to be frank not night and day better than a rekitted and optimised oem cartridge. And we went through exactly the same grief of them blowing through their stroke as JD intimated in another thread.
Ohlins released their 25mm cartridge kits and all of a sudden the game has been lifted. I hear what JD is saying that the advantage is not solely down to it being both 25mm and sweeping more volume for any given distance of stroke. That is so. Its easier to better tolerance a cartridge when the size is 25mm and it is clear that the performance of the larger size shims is both more responsive and stable. Its no accident that in the world of MX the cartridge i.d size has grown over the years from 20 to 25mm and now beyond 30mm. In ordinary everyday road bikes the size has remained at 20mm because of 3 or more predominant reasons, cost, cost and cost. A few years back the TL1000 S / R and first GSXR1300s had 25mm cartridges, a much better base to improve from. But clearly making such stuff in low volumes when 90% of everything else remained at 20mm didnt rest well with the accountants who call the shots in these large factories. Less volume and more material cost....
JD mentioned pressure balance and how true it is that you cannot get too aggressive with the 20mm cartridges otherwise you end up with cavitation. That is one reason a checkplate mid valve system is largely employed in oem and aftermarket 20mm cartridges. Bending shim stack midvalves have appeared in some oem cartridges but the setting cannot be firmed up as much as desired for a road race application without introducing the very bad effects of cavitation.
The human mind is always afraid of change and I was no less than that when we started embracing the bending shim stack midvalve in Ohlins 25mm cartridges. (This has only largely occured this race season.) But having now intensively worked with it the advantages are very very obvious, 3 to 4 riders under the lap record at every round of the national champs this year in Superbike, in part because they can go in deeper on the brakes. More sidegrip, better feel. And in a roadbike installation ( albeit with a slightly softer setting ) the rider is over the moon with the performance and ride compliance. And this same guy has shared the journey that I have been through with respec kits, then 20mm aftermarket cartridge kits and now 25mm.
Apples for apples a well sorted 25mm cartridge kit with good components will outperform a well sorted 20mm cartridge kit with good components. That in essence is what the top riders in the National champs are telling me and proving on track. It is always possible for a good rider to win a national level road race with 20mm stuff but in doing so being right on the edge of his comfort zone.
In this application ( notwithstanding the overall mix of excellent well developed components ) bigger is better.
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