patooyee said:I love how people talk about "tuning" air shocks when I've never even heard of anyone changing a shim stack in one.
I've changed lots, now you've heard about it.
patooyee said:I love how people talk about "tuning" air shocks when I've never even heard of anyone changing a shim stack in one.
tiny said:I've changed lots, now you've heard about it.
tiny said:I've changed lots, now you've heard about it.
tiny said:Sure, pootie. Most air shocks come 40/90. Neither the comp. or the rebound has enough restriction for the air shocks type of spring rate. High preload, very small rate gain, until the end of coarse. Especially when you get all foamy, as you pointed out.
However, I do call it tuning when I change the oil in them. Or even just add oil. Kind of like changing coils, on a coilover.
tiny said:Sure, pootie. Most air shocks come 40/90. Neither the comp. or the rebound has enough restriction for the air shocks type of spring rate. High preload, very small rate gain, until the end of coarse. Especially when you get all foamy, as you pointed out.
However, I do call it tuning when I change the oil in them. Or even just add oil. Kind of like changing coils, on a coilover.
TacomaJD said:I've always read that when setting up your rig for air shocks, 4-6" of shaft showing is the sweet spot at static ride height for air shocks.
xjpaddler said:I found that on my old rig it performed a lot better with the limit strap pressed tight buy the air shocks.
patooyee said:My point about tuning was just that few have ever given air shocks a fair swing IMO and that people think they've exhausted their potential before they ever even touch the shims. I've literally started threads about shimming air shocks and either been ridiculed for asking or received close to zero input. (As everyone knows, I care nothing about being ridiculed.) How about flutter stacks, messed with them at all?
So you add a lot of compression and rebound? More compression I'm guessing? Have you played with the single bleed pistons at all? They're reputed to be more for crawling but everyone knows that crawling is boring.
You're literally maybe the second or third person I've ever talked to that has messed with air shock shimming.
patooyee said:I bet with the right valving you can get an air shock to ride right at 50/50 shaft height with little to no unloading and a nice soft ride and that the shims involved in doing this will be MUCH heavier than c/o shimming on the same rig. (Due to both small rate gains at that height and frothing fluid being thinner and going through the valves more easily.)
patooyee said:I bet with the right valving you can get an air shock to ride right at 50/50 shaft height with little to no unloading and a nice soft ride and that the shims involved in doing this will be MUCH heavier than c/o shimming on the same rig. (Due to both small rate gains at that height and frothing fluid being thinner and going through the valves more easily.)
Not really. I think the consensus with the high speed stuff these days is that you want something around 50/50 shock shaft just to give you more shaft to absorb hits with ANY shock. Most seem to have found this unobtainable with air shocks though because they loose control. My theory is that 50/50 may be obtainable if one were to actually bother tuning their shim stacks and not just air/oil levels.Blase said:I'm building right now using 2.5" air shocks and the above statement caught my eye so I want to be sure I understand it. Part of your theory is that the shock will work better if at ride it is in the middle of its range of motion? So on a 14" shock 7" of shaft showing at ride height correct?
I was always told (I have never personally messed with air shocks before!) that since the charge was on the top the more shaft that you had showing the higher the charge needed to be. The higher the charge needed to be the more unloading would be present.
I have no clue when it comes to the shims but i'd love to see someone try adjusting the valve pack and report back on what works and what didn't!! :****:
Learn me something Patooyee
patooyee said:My point about tuning was just that few have ever given air shocks a fair swing IMO and that people think they've exhausted their potential before they ever even touch the shims. I've literally started threads about shimming air shocks and either been ridiculed for asking or received close to zero input. (As everyone knows, I care nothing about being ridiculed.) How about flutter stacks, messed with them at all?
So you add a lot of compression and rebound? More compression I'm guessing? Have you played with the single bleed pistons at all? They're reputed to be more for crawling but everyone knows that crawling is boring.
You're literally maybe the second or third person I've ever talked to that has messed with air shock shimming.
patooyee said:Did Brandon ever revalve? Have you?
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