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FS650 stock suspension setup

Joined Jan 2007
438 Posts | 0+
Bundaberg. QLD.Australia
Took possession of the new 08 FS650 nearly 6 weeks ago now & have had a few problems with the suspension setup as stock. I've got 300kms on it now & have backed both the front & rear compression clickers nearly fully out & still feels like I'm riding a brick. I've done the static & rider sag so far & have it on the soft side of the standard settings.

How long should it take for the suspension to "settle in ", as such or do I need to do more kms on it before playing around with it too much ?

Other than that ( & an 8 stroking idle but that's another story ) the bike has been a weapon to ride as long as you don't try to go around corners at speed.

Cheers,

Wal
 
Hey Wal why don't you give Frank Pons a call he did my suspension when Steve had a day at his place, it is a joy to ride now. He does road bikes so i'm sure he would be able to help with super moto setup.Or talk to Steve he really knows his stuff with suspension.
Regards Pids
 
I could be wrong here with my experience with Husabergs being limited to the FS650E, but I was just wondering if you've ever had a FS model before? It's just I've heard the suspension is "harder" the SM's, and if you've come from FE, the difference could seem quite pronounced?

Just a thought

Crispin
 
I wasted a lot of time thinking my phorks would settle in wear in or just start bloody working at all

"its WP you have to break them in" everyone says

they didn't.

300ks should be enough to tell if there going to work how you want, I'd change the oil and play around with the oil level, check the preload on the springs clean the metal out of the bushes etc etc

be interesting to know what wrong with them in general shims wise and what needs doing to make them work too

regards
Bushie
 
Thanks Pids, not a bad idea. I originally thought Frank Pons only did enduro setups.

Having come from the FE does make it a little pre-emptive but my Fe turns on a dime compared to the FS. I would have thought with the reduced wheelbase it would have been tighter to turn. My bad obviously, but I do need more time on the bike.

I went through my manual & apparently they have 5wt oil stock so 2.5wt might soften the blow. Correct me if I'm wrong but changing the airgap only works on the last part of the suspension travel doesn't it ? I have pumped the front & cant even get 1/2 travel out of the forks even under really hard braking ( almost breaking into an endo ). I haven't looked at the airgap yet but will this weekend when I get home.
 
fs brick

Wildman they are set up like brick so when you going fast the suspension starts to work .
with Motard s static sage means buger all . I am 88kg and i have made my sus a bit harder from the stock setting and it still bottoms out over the table top
also the triple clams are adjustable for of set the more of set the essayer it turns I think they are adjustable from 16mm to 18 mm .I have 20mm of triple clamps bolted to my FS
and it.turns awesome
another trick is to get 20mm bar raisers and then drop you forks through 20mm makes it turn even faster .
Cheers Matt
 
I made 50mm bar raisers for the FE & they're wickid. Might re-design them at 25mm ( I'm 6'2" ) for the FS & try to ride harder. Still like bushmechanics idea of pulling the front shocks apart & see what makes them tick. Once I get them apart I'm phucked, cause I've got no idea what to change so want to try everything else beforehand.
 
oil height changes the whole feel of the forks right down to the initial harshness lots of people lower the oil level (less oil) to get better compliance over sharp edges, nobody is ever going to add oil to increase initial harshness but it does do that uless the Mv is changed a bit as well so its written as "add oil to increase bottoming resistance and spring rate in the last part of the travel"

your "supposed" only to use oil height to tune the last bit of travel but then WP stuff is "supposed" to be great ..... lots of stuff thats supposed to happen never really turns out as its supposed to.

the oil height is very important I missed a great bandaid on my forks by not playing with the oil level and weights first, its easy to do and doesn't require that you remove the forks from the bike.

someone on here found their FS fork springs prelaoded by 30mm or so...

IMHO if you can make bar raisers you can change shims, do it more than once and what to do next isn't so daunting.
 
Cheers for the advice bushie. I'll sort out the oil height first & see if that makes any difference. I've backed the preload off 6 full turns from fully on so it only leaves 3 full turns to go. Worst case scenario I pull the shim stacks... :shock: it's like the first time you do your valve clearances...you $hit yourself your gunna stuff something but it normally works out in the end.

Keep you informed of what happened when I can.
 
awesome,

there should be some spring spacers in there that you could pull out for even less prelaod, the factory external adjuster may not actually start anywhere near zero

yeah its a bit like the engine valves ..... but unlike the engine you can't really destroy anything by having the wrong shims as long as your careful testing it and its completely reversible so there is nothing to loose except some time. just watch less TV. :)

you probaly know this but its crucial that the axle be seated properly or the forks can feel harsh, the smallest tweak and it may need adjusting.
 
I have noticed that the front wheel isn't straight in the fork setup so will make sure I check it when re-assembling. I haven't had the forks apart yet but know of the plastic spacer in the preload so might remove it ( about 5mm I thinks ) to give more adjustment via external method once back together again. I've been reading through the doc again today so will take heed of the info provided & write down starting settings so have a baseline to work from. Might need some guidance on shim placement when the time comes though.

Cheers for the imput... :wink:
 
sounds like we should get together again wal.
from our last ride together a month or 2 back, i've had my forks apart a number of times making changes.i'm no expert myself in suspension set up but is quite easy to make changes once shown how.i have also been getting a few ideas off bushy as he probably knows more than most.
could be quite interesting having them pulled apart at the same time comparing the changes they've made between 2001 to 2008.
just better buy light beer this time so we don't get your internals scrambled up with mine & we don't kill ourselves when we go testing.
i'll have to buy you some butt pads for a Christmas present.ha ha
sorry mate ,at least it wasn't me this time.
..weed..
 
no worries popup, will try to make it sooner rather than later & you're definately right with the light beers. Will ring you soon to see where your at with spare time.
 
stock shim stacks

Well, spent the weekend down at Popup's place doing the forks on the FS650. He had his forks out of the FE650 so we compared the two. I dont have Weeds shim stack written down so he'll have to post them but I do now have mine so here goes;

BV Stack; 24,24,16,24,24,24,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18
MV Stack, Rebound; 24d,24d,24d,24d,24d,16(20), 20,20,20,10,10,16
MV Stack,Compression;24,24,24,24,22,20,18,11

Now I know why the forks were like a brick with all those 24's one after another. One thing that perplexed Weed & I was the 16(20) shim in the MV Stack. The 16 is 0.15mm thick & sits inside the 20 which is 0.25mm thick. So it virtually floats inside the other shim, weird. I didn't want to change the MV stack as I moved & removed some from the BV stack.

New BV stack looks like this now.

BV Stack; 24,16,24,24,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

I have taken it for a test ride & much more plush in the first 2 inches of fork travel. Now I'm getting used to the bike more I have been able to throw it about & push it which has made the sussies feel alot better.Couldn't have been riding it hard enough to work the shocks before. Gettin there now.Photo's of shim stacks uploading now.

Keep you all informed of any further changes ( which will probably be on the MV )

Chers,

Wal
 

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RE: stock shim stacks

Thanks for that Wal, I'll be interested to hear what you think after a ride or 2.
 
RE: stock shim stacks

this is good stuff Wal, kinda fun eh?

BV Stack; 24,16,24,24,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

ahm not any kind of expert on an FS but the one 24 on the face doesn't work in my bike it wallows around to much and is harsher than a stiffer stack. 8O

5x24, 22, 20, 18, 16, 14,12,10, 16,18 or even no 18 under will likely be a lot smoother even initially but as always its your bike and you're the boss. I call the extra 22 a toyota shim .. if loosing the 16 makes things abit niggly and harsh I'd address the MV with a bleed stage or bleed hole or change the MV spring and float rather than put the 16 back in the BV.

the ring shim thingy you found in the rebound stack is to prelaod the rebound stack

i think that in general stock dirt rebound stacks need to be softer initially so it doesn't pack on little bumps but should ramp up very quickly to handle both long stroke LS movements and any HS movements so it doesn't wallow or launch. the prelaoding of the stack is doing that a little by prelaoding it but there is no x over and overall it looks very stiff .

reminds me of car shockabsorber rebound "stacks" where they have a prelaoded blowoff spring pushing on the "stack" perhaps in the FS where bumps are smaller they are looking to do most of the LS with the clicker bleed and the whole rebound stack is like a blowoff spring. id suggest though as an ejumicated guess that summink like

24d,24d,24d, 16x0.1 or 0.05, 24d,24d,16(20), 20,20,20,10,10,16

would be nicer on niggly little bumps but might wallow a little in turns... just a thought. whats there allready may actually be extreemely good for an FS.

if you look at pg 13 of the fork tuning for enduros thread smorgasbord has a different approach to his rebound stack a 0.2mm prelaod dish on the piston and a 1.3mm bleed hole in the MV with a soft LS stage. I think (?) that what results is a very quick acting but relatively soft initail rebound that ramps up quicker than normal because the 24ds are closer to the HS shims. sounds good ! Im using a similar approach but without a stack. :oops:

the real action is at the MV compression arrangement

what was the MV float ? and was the spring made from 0.87mm diameter wire or 0.6? any bleed holes in the piston webs?

its important with this stuff to do whatever you feel is right at the time not just what you read on a forum so please take the above however you like and do whatever you want. but please let us know how it goes :D

regards
Bushie
 
Re: RE: stock shim stacks

bushmechanic said:
if you look at pg 13 of the fork tuning for enduros thread smorgasbord has a different approach to his rebound stack a 0.2mm prelaod dish on the piston and a 1.3mm bleed hole in the MV with a soft LS stage. I think (?) that what results is a very quick acting but relatively soft initail rebound that ramps up quicker than normal because the 24ds are closer to the HS shims. sounds good ! Im using a similar approach but without a stack. :oops:
Yes, the entire stack is actually preloaded by the dishing of the piston face and I think what is happening is the same as what bushy thinks about it. I wanted when the fork was fullyish compressed and in the air to quickly rebound, that's why i did not go for the "constant speed" rebound as bushy did.
But when you think of it, wouldn't such a hit send the front aloft?, yes it would, and there would be time enough for the constant speed rebound forks to rebound before the wheel hit the ground again. Unless it's a rock sticking up. The slower highest speed rebound would relieve the rider from much of the reaction forces of the spring and air gap so I don't really think that in that particular situation the dish is better than the Bushmechanics rebound valve, on the contrary I think the dish is less comfortable.
In general I think that the Bushmechanics valves are a couple of steps ahead, it will take WP 10 years to get there, maybe faster than that once bushy have published his designs.
Regards.
 
I'm sure the BV & MV float was 1.45mm from the scribble I have written in my diary. The thing that Popup & I were trying in Vain to work out was what does what in the stacks. What effects the LS damping v's the HS damping. We worked out that the BV & MV work alot like a carburator with the transition from one part of the valve setup to the next being the key but couldnt identify which part of the stack effected which part of the travel. Thats the main reason I didn't change too much & mainly wanted to record what was in there as standard so my Husaberg brothers could shed some light on whats what.

We did notice that the float spring in my FS was alot heavier than the on in Popup's FE650. We both got photo's comparing the 2 setups but I haven't posted mine yet as some of his were better photo's I'll stick some more in with this post to hopefully help.
 

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you did good not changing too much

say with the Bv you could try

16,24,24,24,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

not too much different to what youve got
then try
24,24,16,24,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18
then
24,24,24,16,24,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

24,24,24,24,16,24,24,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

then move it 2 spots

24,24,24,24,24,24,16,22,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,18

then take it out, then pull one of the 22s and the bottom 18. put the 16 instead of the heavy 18 to protect the stem.

24,24,24,24,24,24,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,16

thats what I did. but I needed a stiffer long stroke HS so I put 24s under the 10 but thats probably not needed on an FS unless you charge gutters head on.

I'll try and explain a bit of what I found out about boingers in case its interesting

It looks like the heavy MV spring on your bike. its not all that bad really to have a heavy MV spring (mine is a monster) if you do something like this to soften the initial harshness say just with what you have

MV
24,18, 24,24,20,11, 24, 22

the 18 is like a bleed shim but you can't put it on the MV directly without screwing up the rebound consistency so one step away is next best. if it dives too much you can close up the float with more shims under the stack or use the 20 or 22 as the bleed instead of the 18. if its too harsh cut the 18 down to a 16 or a 14 or a 12.

ultimately it would probably be considered by most to be better to do something like lew :oops: but I do like the heavy spring with a bleed stage.

(lews stack)
Mid-valve
24x.15
20x.1
14x.1
(2)10x.20
16x.1
20x.1
light ck-spring (same as popups or a KYB)

there are a lot of ways to think about which shims do what and where and many tuners have different ideas and argue themselves silly about it all on furums, everyone can get good suspension from applying their own approach if they do it methodically and logically. the carb comparison is pretty good though I don't think that any fork valve knows which part of the stroke its in? only how far the rod has moved from rest and how fast the rod moves.

that is i think that you can have some stroke sensitivity (short or long stroke) from the shimstacks with stages particulary the BV but not really technically posititon sensitivity unless every hit is taken from full extension then its the same thing to a degree. just MHO

the strength and prelaoding of the MV spring control some very Low speeds and contribute to initial harshness.

the MV float influences how high in the stroke the forks will ride and how responsive they feel, but as the float reduces percieved stiffness increases so as you reduce the float you may want to reduce the number of shims in the MV stack, reducing the number of shims in the stack reduces their support and lifespan. I'd not go too much below 1.2 mm in those forks without building some kind of extra support for the shims.

which shims do which speed ... ah I think all the shims influence everything a bit.

in the BV stack the face 24s in particular (like the Mv spring) influence every speed because obviously they have to move first before any oil passes them though they are mostly thought of as LS and short stroke HS.

its more complicated than this but say

24,24,24,24,24,24,22,20,18,16,14,12,10,16

your supposed to pull out the 12 to make it softer for rocks if there is any on the road? say potholes . or pull the 12 and the 14 and replace them with a 13.

if you change the 10 to a 9 or an 8.5 you make the whole stack softer but you also alter the balance between HS and LS (stifness varies as the beam length cubed)

to have a stiffer LS/MS you add 24s (LS) but that also stiffens everything or a 19 or 17 or 15 (MS) but that also stiffens HS so then you have to comphenstae by changing the pivot or pulling the 12.

harder than which shim does what is deciding which speed needs to be stiffer or softer for a given application and ony trial and error can really help there.

lots of guys pull out too many 24s on the BV or have a piddly little first stage to try and reduce initial harshness which is better dealt with on the MV. what they often get is a wallowing bike with an odd harshness and a very lumpy progression through the stroke that blows through when pushed.

the challenge is to get a stiff enough LS and MS to stop wallowing and blowing through the stroke without any initial harshness or a too stiff HS.

its very possible and very rewarding though it does take some time to find stuff out. there are a few other little tricks to help like a very thin face bleed shim on the BV, Ill explain that if anyone is interested in using one.

FWIW i think about 20% of possible improvements lie in the rebound stack of most bikes.

sorry for the long post, got a torrets thing or summink .. once i start.... gotta finish

I hope its helpful somehow or at least a bit of a laugh

regards
Bushie
 

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