parkec wrote:In the near future you can add Race Tech to the list of shock suppliers. It is my understanding they are currently working throughthe rebuilding your shocks vs building a new shock exercise. In either case it will be built your way, and to your imagination.
The RaceTech option came up on the MOA Hexhead forum.. and while there was initially hope it would be a less expensive option than the Euro options - their complete shock (without hydraulic preload adjuster) was considerably more than any of the better equipped euro options. Just a FWIW - they'll probably be very good - but I can't see them being marketable at the price point they quoted people.
Per the guys at Taxxion Dynamics Penske apllications are very limited because Penske Engineers and BMW Engineers have a low opinion of one another

.
Wonder why that would make a difference? Do the Penske engineers actually care what the BMW engineers do - or need info from them?
AND
per a less than year old Motorcylce Consumer News shock test on an RT...........It's all in the set up.
They tested Ohlins, Hyperpro, and stock. Ohlins won, They thought the Hyperpro was too sport bike like. All that being said they spent an incredible amount of time setting up/testing shock adjustments.
Do you happen to know what issue that was? I'd be interested in reading it, and don't understand how I missed it since I receive MCN (the US version - not the UK one..) I have the past 10 years of MCN moldering down in my cellar..
EDIT - now I think I recall the article. Moshe Levy did it (he's a friend and local) and he was using an accelerometer (measures displacement vs time) to measure the movement and speed of movement of the shocks. His conclusion was - while he could make nice plots - they really didn't mean anything conclusive (IIRC..) We discussed the shocks off line a bit, and I don't think he really announced a "winner". I'll have to dig it out. BTW - he did the article with the help of Klaus from EPM Imports (Hyperpro importer for the US..)
As far as setup - I normally try to dedicate about 2-3 hours of setup time. It has to be time where I have nothing else on my mind, good weather, and I'm in the right frame of mind to do it. I also always use the same route (about a 5 mile loop with varying surfaces/conditions.)
The payback is well worth the time. If it's the first time you've done it - double the time. If it's a redo of the same shock (say after having it rebuilt) - you can normally cut the time about in half (since you should have recorded the settings that worked before sending the shock in for rebuilding.) But I'd agree - without the right setup you're wasting money on a quality shock.
Wonder what spring they had on the HyperPro? I found for the rear I prefer a linear wound spring rather than the progessive wound one that is standard on their shocks. Either is available.. Both Ohlins and Wilbers come with linear wound springs.
With all that being said................to paraphrase my Lee Park's Total Control Instructors most riders would be much, much better off with a $300 skills class than $2,000 worth of new shocks. (I bought my Wibers as farkles

can a 3.0 final drive be next

)
If all you were looking for is control of the bike I might agree with the instructors. If you're also looking for better control AND better comfort - then they're fullabeans so to speak. No way the skills class is going to make the bike more comfortable to ride. I personally want both..
Have fun with the 3.0 final drive
