Do I detect a lot of anger flowing around this place? Kind of like a pubescent volatility, some angst, a lot of I'm-sixteen-and-angry-at-my-father syndrome?
fuck that noise.
gmen.
While we’re here - easiest way to disassemble thru frame routing to have any prayer or using it without bleed on new frame and with minimal fussing of gears? Let’s just assume I have zero of the Shimano small parts that came with the brakes. I assume my best bet is to disassemble everything at the bars, pull the der and rear brake, dropper , remove front wheel, and then remove the cockpit in one swoop?
Do I detect a lot of anger flowing around this place? Kind of like a pubescent volatility, some angst, a lot of I'm-sixteen-and-angry-at-my-father syndrome?
fuck that noise.
gmen.
More Lyrik puzzling:
I've been chasing a good setup on this fork since day one on my '21 Norco Sight. It's always felt uncomposed going through chunk at speed or on big hits. Generally the feel has been harsh (I know I know overused).
Finally realized in late August that I was getting no damping. Did a damper rebuild and the fork felt amazing. Finally was able to run settings near recommended and fly into chunk etc. The amazingness lasted ~5 rides and its been progressively reverting to suck mode ever since. I still have some damping effect at the far end of the range but it's very minimal.
What's going on here? Anyone ever had a similar problem? At this point I'm thinking send to Rockshox and hope for some warranty-able issue, but also tempted to cut bait and buy something else.
Bleed kits: are all syringes compatible with DOT fluid??
I have (had) an Hayes bleed kit I really like. Was doing some work on the bike last weekend, cleaned the syringes with isopropanol and left them to dry on the fence (only spot that was in the sun at the time). Came back 45 minutes later, syringes gone. I assume some neighborhood Karen thought a junky had carefully laid out his heroin kit on a fence for retrieval later. 25 mL syringes cause that's how much drug them junkies do these days. Fittings were fortunately left behind.
I have access to plenty of syringes at work, medical grade. OK with DOT? Would rather know before I melt one down and have to dispose of the mess...
"Your wife being mad is temporary, but pow turns do not get unmade" - mallwalker the wise
"Your wife being mad is temporary, but pow turns do not get unmade" - mallwalker the wise
I can get syringes from the local pharmacist for < 2$ you probably want the large for brake bleed
and a medium for injecting a delamed ski with slowset 2part right into the screw hole after which I tossed it out
the syriges that come in bleed kits have a threaded end but you can get around that
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Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
Need some advice...put a big scratch in my shock stanchion when the bike fell over smh. I smoothed it out, nail polish and sanded with 3000 grit...it's pretty smooth but not all the way. But I'm leaving for a 10 day trip with my bike in a week. Do I try and source a damper shaft and replace? Pickup a coil? Ride as is and top off the air every other day? WWYD?
Why would you need a damper shaft or to top up air from a scratch in the stanchion?
A scratch in the stanchion will potentially damage your dust wipers and, depending where the scratch is, your bushings. And it'll allow a little dirt to get into the lowers, which could, over time, damage your damper shaft or air shaft (depending on which side the scratch is on).
If it's pretty smooth, just run it. You're not gonna notice a difference and it's realistically not going to cause any internal damage for a long, long time. Maybe never.
10 day trips don’t come around often for most people… I’d make sure your bike is working well for the trip.
One option worth considering, buy a used shock (air or coil) and flip it after the trip if it doesn’t seem like a worthwhile upgrade. You might not even loose much money. Watch the spring rates on coils and lookup what you’d need.
Regarding replacing the shaft… I would personally do that… then hate that decision when I was short on time to do it or something goes wrong. I’ve had this multiple times where you’re trying to repair your bike, something goes wrong and suddenly you are scrambling to even have something rideable for your trip.
A light scratch on a fork is NBD because the air chamber is independent of the stanchions. Air shocks work differently: the air chamber seals against the shaft, so a scratch there could cause it to lose air. Does it?
If you go on a few rides and the shock works normally and holds air, you're likely good to go. Replacement then depends on your budget and whether you think it's going to get worse (somehow). If it doesn't hold air, you have your answer.
ride bikes, climb, ski, travel, cook, work to fund former, repeat.
Wait, is this on a fork or a rear shock?
Stanchion = fork. Shaft = rear shock.
A scratch on a fork stanchion isn't going to cause you to lose air, but it sounds like this is a scratch on the rear shock shaft. If that's the case and it's losing 5psi / ride, and you've get a week to get it sorted, then your option is pretty much to find a different shock to put on the bike. You can send it back to the manufacturer to get a new shaft installed, but that's not happening in a week.
Also, are you sure the shock/fork is losing air, and it’s not just the pressure dropping from attaching the shock pump?
Pretty much from new my roxshox super deluxe would lose air every night, not all of the air but just enough so the travel tell-tale would be off the shaft and I would be bottoming out so I pump it up every day before riding
The service center said there was nothing wrong with the shock but after they did the service replaced some seals or whatever the leaking stopped
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
"Your wife being mad is temporary, but pow turns do not get unmade" - mallwalker the wise
Medical syringes seem fine with dot fluid but Shimano mineral oil swells then pretty quickly.
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