Ok - you know the forks and front end are done, I've done a few hundred miles on them now and all I can say is that the
handling is 100% better but that the
ride is shite! I can only conclude that the forks either aren't set up properly, or have too much oil in them cos they feel waaaay too stiff. There's also a definite 'clunk' over bumps which sounds/feels like the forks are either topping out, or the races aren't tight. I'm going to check the races this afternoon as thinking about it, I'm wondering if I put enough torque on the lock-nuts... I remember when I re-assembled the stem assembly that the rubber washer between them kept squeezing out. Perhaps it needs to go and the lock-nuts be torqued down harder..!
Presently I have 7.5wt oil in them, I have 5wt to replace it with which is the standard R1 weight. I've no idea what the spring rate is (can anyone tell me how to find out..?) but have the pre-load screwed right out. Other settings are in the middle of the ranges.
At the moment, the max no-load travel is 140mm (from the bottom of the seal to the top of the casting on the bottom of the fork leg). With the bike's weight (static sag?) it drops 45mm to 95mm from the casting. With me sat on it (95 kilo

) it doesn't move appreciably more than that...! With me bouncing it up and down as hard as I can there's still 40mm left to the bottom of the fork. Now I know it won't get right down there, but I would expect more than 55mm of dynamic travel! For the initial part of the static travel the forks move nice and freely, but after that there's a fair bit of sticktion.
I can't
see any obvious kink or creasing in the fork tube, or any inappropriate wear on the plating so I'm not convinced a leg is bent, but I think I'm resigned to having to strip them down to check and also make sure they're completely empty before re-filling them.
So, has anyone done a full strip?? Conventional forks are a piece of pudding, but I've never tackled a set of USDs before... any hints, help or manuals??
Cheers
Greg