Sound right.
I would add more volume reducers
Very much so, although how much it goes in or doesn't i wouldn't like to say. Todays shock spacers though we sat and watched the install video together this morning but i did the work myself while he's at school as i wanted the bike ready so he can rock up and get riding later. But again, i'll show him it in person. We did the wheel bearings together and last week when replacing the forks in his mates bike i made sure they were both there, passing me tools etc.
Excellentweeksy wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 12:14 pmVery much so, although how much it goes in or doesn't i wouldn't like to say. Todays shock spacers though we sat and watched the install video together this morning but i did the work myself while he's at school as i wanted the bike ready so he can rock up and get riding later. But again, i'll show him it in person. We did the wheel bearings together and last week when replacing the forks in his mates bike i made sure they were both there, passing me tools etc.
On Sunday last week i got him to bleed his own back brake with both of us doing the tooling/bleed so he can work out the how and why and get 'feel' of what i mean.
weeksy wrote: ↑Mon Nov 02, 2020 10:45 amI'd agree mate, that's why i've done all of mine But i do have a rather expensive removal and press kit
This isn't for the Bird, this is the Sworks. I just wasn't sure if the bottom type is OK or the top type is specific to the Sworks. It seems from further reading that the spacer type that slots in is older technology and it's perfectly find to swap for the newer style (which is the type we usually see nowdays).
Indeedy, we've moved away from all of them now though with the Bikeyoke fitted allowing standard metric shocks plus the bushings/spacers, everything else is stock now. Of course the bearing/pivot bolts are Spencialized specific, but that's the case with all bikes that their pivot stuff is specific to them rather than generic.