Oh Yuck! I take it you had seen it...
Ick!, I had a lock to lock on my old bike over a bump, just out of the blue!. I find with the R6 the trick is to ride it aggressively to maintain the best control as scary as that sounds :/.
Hey! Let me know how your R6 setup goes Maki . We might be able to help eachother on the path to taming our R6's hehe
If you set the basic sag first, you make the whole exercise pointless if you then adjust the geometry by adjusting the front and rear preload. The only way to set sag is to set the preload and if you then change the preload to alter the geometry you may as well not have bothered.
This is the reason I said that setting sag was not relevant in this case.
Ride fast or be last.
Ride fast or be last.
When I got my R6 I backed off my preload a bit because I am a feather. By backing off the preload, the resault was it did "sag" the bike a fraction, but the spring is not "loaded" as much. End resualt is it takes the power out of the spring so the R6 does not throw me off! hehe
You can lower your tripple clamps on the forks a bit, it will change your rake unless you can compensate with the rear but you are starting to move the bike outside of it's design parameters.. but I would be interested to know the results on that trial hehe
Lies... its hard work when you have no idea what you're doing... ask aff-man http://www.kiwibiker.co.nz/forums/sh...ad.php?t=26464
I would suggest getting someone who knows about suspension to assist you, as its reasonably complicated (and very important)![]()
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
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