I guess I didn't experiment enough.
A few years ago I had Progressive springs put in my XJ's front forks. I had thought they had a little to much preload, but not enough for me to want to take the fork caps off and play with the spacers.
However, over the weekend I upped the pressure in the XJ's rear shocks from my normal of 24 psi to about 32 psi. Guess what...front forks feel much better!
Too little air pressure in the XJ's rear air-adjustable shocks seems to have resulted in mis-matched suspension tuning. With a little more preload in back the forks seem more 'planted' and work better at absorbing small to mid-size irregularities.
Just a comment...anyone running air-adjustable rear air shocks may want to experiment with a wider range of pressures than you might otherwise normally run, particularly if you have made front suspensions mods.
A few years ago I had Progressive springs put in my XJ's front forks. I had thought they had a little to much preload, but not enough for me to want to take the fork caps off and play with the spacers.
However, over the weekend I upped the pressure in the XJ's rear shocks from my normal of 24 psi to about 32 psi. Guess what...front forks feel much better!
Too little air pressure in the XJ's rear air-adjustable shocks seems to have resulted in mis-matched suspension tuning. With a little more preload in back the forks seem more 'planted' and work better at absorbing small to mid-size irregularities.
Just a comment...anyone running air-adjustable rear air shocks may want to experiment with a wider range of pressures than you might otherwise normally run, particularly if you have made front suspensions mods.
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