revalved stock shocks?
#1
Registered User
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: miramar
Posts: 310
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
revalved stock shocks?
Just wondering if anyone has had the stock honda schocks revalved for better handling, and to mate better with stiffer/shorter springs? If so what were the results....I would like to further tune my cars handeling a bit, but going from remote reservoir shocks stock to monotubes for $2G is kinda hard to do.
#5
Can you even get into the stock bodies without cutting?
#7
Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Farsala , Greece
Posts: 91
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Anybody willing to experiment ? Here are some thoughts . The stock shocks are mono tube design thus the oil and gas are separating by a floating piston . the oil is taking the space on the upper part of the tube . One can drill a small hole the top part of the tube , where the shaft never reaches , weld a nut on top of the hole and use appropriate bolt as a plug , then turn shock upside down and empty the shock oil . Use motorcycle fork oils of different viscosities or mix them to achieve desired viscosity . The thicker oil should give more damping both bound and rebound but the thick oil some times plays nasty games when passing through valves heating up and creating foam . Good luck to any takers , I'm not willing to spend any time to do it myself due to high degree of uncertainty .
Trending Topics
#8
Registered User
Revalving shocks requires availability of different internal valve pieces -- it's very unlikely these are available off the shelf, in which case you'd have to fabricate your own at great expense.
I'm with spa-zz -- why would you want to do this when you could buy a set of Konis for less?
I'm with spa-zz -- why would you want to do this when you could buy a set of Konis for less?
#9
Our friend from Greece is correct that you could change the damping rate by using s different viscosity oil rather than changing the valve components. I'm not sure that you wouldn't also need to release the gas pressure in the lower part of the tube.
I looked at my stock shocks yesterday, and it looks like the top ends are crimped on. It doesn't look like you can take one apart in a reversible way.
I'm not sure what the point would be -- designfreak, are you concerned that a shock without a remote reservoir would have less total travel? If that's it, the first questions to ask would be: How much travel do the stock rear shocks have? How much travel do the monotube replacements have?
I looked at my stock shocks yesterday, and it looks like the top ends are crimped on. It doesn't look like you can take one apart in a reversible way.
I'm not sure what the point would be -- designfreak, are you concerned that a shock without a remote reservoir would have less total travel? If that's it, the first questions to ask would be: How much travel do the stock rear shocks have? How much travel do the monotube replacements have?