I have drained my forks on the bike to replace the perished seals.
upon reading my haynes manual, it says to top up the fluid with 450cc of 10w fork oil.
1- Is 10w fork oil correct, or is there a better alternative ?
2- Does my haynes manual mean 450cc of the oil in each fork or 225?
Ive been a melon as i should have measured what came out.
Cheers
FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
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- gavins
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
I've always used 10w on the road and 15w for racing but then i'm only 8 & 1/2 stone so may not be the best benchmark.
The oil capacity is 450cc per fork. Use genuine fork seals if you can, aftermarket ones can tend to be tighty and stick a little.
The oil capacity is 450cc per fork. Use genuine fork seals if you can, aftermarket ones can tend to be tighty and stick a little.
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
Spot on that was very informative!
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
Measuring the air gap is more accurate than just tipping a measured ammount of oil :)
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
And what should that measure ?
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
When filling the fork legs up you need to bleed the air out by compressing and extending them until there is no air still trapped in the bottom of the legs, then before you put the springs back in compress the legs fully then insert a rule and measure from the top edge of the fork leg down into the inside, the k models should measure 90 mm to the oil and 122 mm for k, l, m, n, models .... Then re extend the legs and finish assembling as you would p.s. This is all in the Haynes manual on the first page of the suspension section
- RickOliver
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
All of the above information is good but a simpler way to set your air gaps is to use a large syringe with the appropriate length of plastic tubing attached - slightly overfill the forks, stick the syringe in and draw out the excess oil until you are only sucking air, at which point the level is correct (done this way it will also be exactly the same in both legs).
Rick
Rick
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Re: FORK OIL NC30 QUERY
this is the easiest and most accurate way to do thing, the local bike shop who do my forks do the same thing.RickOliver wrote:All of the above information is good but a simpler way to set your air gaps is to use a large syringe with the appropriate length of plastic tubing attached - slightly overfill the forks, stick the syringe in and draw out the excess oil until you are only sucking air, at which point the level is correct (done this way it will also be exactly the same in both legs).
Rick
Do you have the later / early forks, I can't remember off hand but the forkoil amount might be different depending on what forks you have
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