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Author Topic: Ride height adjustment  (Read 7170 times)
dang
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« on: June 23, 2008, 06:16:06 PM »

How many folks here have adjusted the ride height on their bike? Not spring preload, but the tie-rod. If you did adjust it, why? How much? How did the adjustment change your ride? Thanks.

Cheers,

Dan
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JohnnyDucati
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« Reply #1 on: June 23, 2008, 06:53:56 PM »

I'm looking forward to doing it, but haven't yet.

I take it as good advice that you should put a steering damper on before you raise the ride height due to the geometry change and rider weight re-distribution over the front end.  The front will steer in quicker on turns be more prone to head shake & the dreaded tank slappers.

As soon as I get my damper, ride height will get adjusted, but not before.

J
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fasterblkduc
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« Reply #2 on: June 24, 2008, 08:26:46 AM »

I'm looking forward to doing it, but haven't yet.

I take it as good advice that you should put a steering damper on before you raise the ride height due to the geometry change and rider weight re-distribution over the front end.  The front will steer in quicker on turns be more prone to head shake & the dreaded tank slappers.

As soon as I get my damper, ride height will get adjusted, but not before.

J

That advice is 100% backwards. The front end is more likely to shake due to not enough weight. Shakes and even the extreme shakes (tankslappers) are from the front wheel getting off center one way or the other. It comes back off center in the other direction and a nasty cycle repeats itself. Monsters need the weight to be forward biased more than stock if you want to improve handling, period. Raising the rear is crucial to achieve this. It will turn in quicker and you don't want to go too high but to get rid of that shaky, light front end feel that the Monsters have while cornering hard, you need to do it.
There are a variety of reasons for headshake but putting more weight on the front is NOT one of them.
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Atomic Racing
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« Reply #3 on: June 24, 2008, 08:52:21 AM »

Mine came from the dealer almost all the way at the bottom. I raised it well over an inch and noticed a definite improvement in handling.

I have never had any problems with headshake and do not have a damper.

The bike feels alot more balanced now and I was able to scrub off the last 1/4 inch on my front tyre.
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johnster
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« Reply #4 on: June 24, 2008, 09:17:25 AM »

There are a variety of reasons for headshake but putting more weight on the front is NOT one of them.

It is if you don't know how to ride out a headshake that's already started. If you have more weight on the bars/front, the shake will get transmitted to the chassis potentially breaking the rear wheel loose, due to the fact that there's less weight on it. Throttle to transfer the weight back to the rear wheel and staying loose on the bars is how you ride out headshake, so actually you're not 100% right...

**EDIT - Sorry, I reread that & it kinda sounded asshole-ish which was not my intent. I'm not trying to argue, Just throwing in my .02  Wink  That's just how I've always thought of it **
« Last Edit: June 24, 2008, 09:23:37 AM by johnster » Logged

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OverCaffeinated
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« Reply #5 on: June 24, 2008, 09:23:09 AM »

I lowered the front and back, and installed a side mount dampener at the same time. The bike was a lil too high for me, I didn't like having to be on tippy toes at lights, especially a light on a hill. I know that a bike with the front stock and raising the back a lil will handle better than mine, but I fell much more comfortable now. I did lower the back way too much, and recently raised it back up slightly. The bike did get a bit twitchy at high speed. I would raise the back even more, but I have a shortened link and I don't know how much more bolt length I still have in the link.
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wengr
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« Reply #6 on: June 24, 2008, 09:37:13 AM »

Where can one get a shortened link? also I have read that the s2r's come adjusted as low as they go when new. is this correct?
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OverCaffeinated
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« Reply #7 on: June 24, 2008, 09:43:07 AM »

Got mine here. You got to call and have them custom machine one of there links.
Madduc

Don't know about s2r being low from factory.
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fasterblkduc
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« Reply #8 on: June 24, 2008, 10:01:34 AM »

It is if you don't know how to ride out a headshake that's already started. If you have more weight on the bars/front, the shake will get transmitted to the chassis potentially breaking the rear wheel loose, due to the fact that there's less weight on it. Throttle to transfer the weight back to the rear wheel and staying loose on the bars is how you ride out headshake, so actually you're not 100% right...

**EDIT - Sorry, I reread that & it kinda sounded asshole-ish which was not my intent. I'm not trying to argue, Just throwing in my .02  Wink  That's just how I've always thought of it **


 Huh?  This discussion is about raising the rear end and the consequences. Someone thought that it could cause headshake which I was explaining that it won't. I never mentioned how to recover from one after it has started which is what you have described. Two different things....and I'm still right Wink
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johnster
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« Reply #9 on: June 24, 2008, 10:27:28 AM »


 Huh?  This discussion is about raising the rear end and the consequences. Someone thought that it could cause headshake which I was explaining that it won't. I never mentioned how to recover from one after it has started which is what you have described. Two different things....and I'm still right Wink

 laughingdp  Fair enough.. Guess I drifted off without even realizing it..  Roll Eyes

In theory, as long as you're loose on the bars it shouldn't magnify headshake even if the bike "is percieved to be" more twitchy with the rear raised.. THERE, I think I said it right this time!!  cheeky
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2001 MS4; Full Termi w/airbox, ECU, SPS cams, CycleCat ClipOn Adapters, Apex clip-ons, CRG's, MW open clutch, Sargent Saddle, CF aplenty.. NOT RIDEABLE FOR A LONG TIME DUE TO MY STUPID LACK OF JUDGEMENT!!
fasterblkduc
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« Reply #10 on: June 24, 2008, 11:06:06 AM »

 Grin

Most of the time one can just ride it out. The bike wants to correct itself and if given zero inputs from the rider, it will. You're right, throttle up, sit back more or do nothing and ride it out. I get it occasionally while racing and I just stay commited and ride through it. If you watch pros race, you see it all the time. Notice that they do nothing noticeably different and just ride on. They are just relaxing their grip but staying commited. It's so common that it's no big deal.
One of the things a damper does is minimize the riders input which is actually what can lead to a worse shake or tank slapper.
I can't remember the stunters name maybe Pfeifer? Anyway, one of his stunts is to sit up in the seat and smack the bars real hard. This sets the bike into a violent headshake and he does nothing at all. He just rides it out. It's because he doesn't give his own input that the bike stays upright and recovers just fine.

I hate it when the misconception of bolting on a damper is the fix for the Monster geometry. It's not. it's trying to put a bandaid on the problem and it's not addressing why the front end feels shaky. I don't fault the people that hear that that is the fix so they go do it. I fault the people that give out false advice on something that they don't understand.
The Monster is quite simply NOT set up to corner hard out of the crate. Park it next to any sportbike. Compare how the two bikes sit. Compare the riding position. Compare the swingarm angle. They look completely different don't they? Which one do you think corners hard without the front end shaking...why do you think that is? Well, it's because one of them IS set up to corner hard and the other is not. Bolting on a damper does not change any of the geometry settings that is so obviously different about the Monster when compared to any sportbike. So, do you really think that this magic damper "fixes" the problem?......think about it.

That being said  Smiley....It is possible to "fix" the issue. Actually it's not really fixing it, it's changing the bike to make it do something that it was not designed to do, but it's possible.

Knowledge is power [moto]
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Atomic Racing
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« Reply #11 on: June 24, 2008, 12:28:27 PM »

Your hands are the best steering dampers on the market. Pending you're smart enough to use them right...
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mihama01
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« Reply #12 on: June 24, 2008, 09:08:34 PM »

Regarding the rear ride height, if you have a recent monster then the ride height is listed in the user manual. They measure it from the tip of the rear mud guard.

I raised mine 1 cm measusring from tip of the rear mudguard downwards and will probably do another 1cm. If you raise it more than a few cms consider lowering the front instead otherwise the bike sits too high and it can adversly affect steering, the bike feels too tall and flops into corners. Regarding stability, it seems to have improved stability, more weight on the front(?)

Don't go too  far because too much weight on the front makes it want to tuck. So make small changes (a cm at a time) and find out where it feels best.

Do the measure ment without the rider to keep it consistent and keep everything else fixed while you make the changes.

Hope that helps waytogo
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dang
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« Reply #13 on: June 25, 2008, 08:38:10 AM »

Thanks for all the input folks. I am a fairly mellow rider and haven't done a track day yet. I am asking about raising the ride height in part because I want to improve the bikes handling but at 200lbs, changing the oil/springs in the front and spring in the rear will probably help most. I am also 6'3" so I am interested in creating more "space".

What do you all think about raising the rear with a handle bar riser up front? Thanks.
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hypurone
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« Reply #14 on: June 25, 2008, 09:25:56 AM »

I have raised the rear of my S4RS 3/4in in the rear and have not moved the front. That coupled with many hours fine tuning the suspension has yielded awesome handling and stability. Though I still choose to run a damper for those OH SHIT moments...

I think you are after something different here tho. You state you want to create more "space". I interpret that as more room for your legs to the foot pegs, yes? If so, raising the rear will not accomplisg this. The aspect ratio between your butt and the pegs won't change one iota. You would need some rearsets or adj pegs mounts for that.
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