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Fork alignment

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 3:15 pm
by Daveg2812
This might be a daft question, but having removed my forks to paint the lowers, on putting them back, I'm faced with lining them up correctly, i.e., so they point forwards, which, to my shame I never considered till now. Is there some trick to this, trial and error, or tighten up the clamps after the wheel is back in? :oops:
Cheers

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 3:19 pm
by slparry
not sure about telelevers but on "normal" forks all I've ever done before is tightened the top yoke clamps and left everything else, bottom yoke, mudguard bolts, spindle and clamps loose then bounced up and down on the suspension with the brakes on to settle it all down then tighten it all up if that makes sense?

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 3:28 pm
by Daveg2812
Yes Steve, it makes great sense, and is kind of what I was thinking when I said fit the wheel and tighten everything afterwards.
Thankyou :D

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 4:28 pm
by Bikerhoss
Lower fork legs move independently of the uppers, so it shouldn't matter if you tighten all the upper bolts first. As you assemble the mudguard, wheel etc, everything will 'self' align :)

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 4:12 am
by dave the german
Dave, is the bike going to be used this year? I'm planning the things you're doing next winter - just worried it might still be this winter

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 7:55 am
by Dai wiskers
As hoss said put it all together and it will self align
Get the legs in the yokes first get the top clips in place then tighten from the top down (that's how i did it and it seems to work)

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 8:26 am
by Gromit
slparry wrote:not sure about telelevers but on "normal" forks all I've ever done before is tightened the top yoke clamps and left everything else, bottom yoke, mudguard bolts, spindle and clamps loose then bounced up and down on the suspension with the brakes on to settle it all down then tighten it all up if that makes sense?
+1 :)

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 9:03 am
by Daveg2812
Thanks for the replies. Yes Dave, the bike will probably be ready to ride this weekend apart from the hugger brackets, which I belatedly sent away for powder coating. That said, next winter will probably be more of the same, but think I'll change most of the relevant nuts and bolts for stainless then.

Posted: Sat May 11, 2013 10:44 am
by Corvus
You had the front wheel powder coated?

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 1:59 am
by dave the german
Think I'm going to give mine the works next winter (or the present winter if the weather doesn't get any better!). Haven't been out on mine yet and I've got a 2000 mile round trip to Garmisch in about 8 weeks time!! Bought a bike lifter thingy from Machine Mart on one of their VAT free weekends so ready for the Winter. At present my SR 500 is on it. I've had that almost 6 months and only stripped the front brake!

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 12:36 pm
by Daveg2812
Corvus wrote:You had the front wheel powder coated?
apart from the hugger brackets, which I belatedly sent away for powder coating :?

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 2:56 pm
by Corvus
Daveg2812 wrote:
Corvus wrote:You had the front wheel powder coated?
apart from the hugger brackets, which I belatedly sent away for powder coating :?
This may be something widely known. If so, I apologise, but recently a friend and I tried to fathom a braking problem on his r1100s. We think it may be associated with powder coat paint applied to the end faces of the five disc mounting "platforms" cast into the front wheel. We think the disc was sticking to the paint when hot, preventing the disc from expanding properly, possibly distorting the disc temporarily. Maybe also preventing adequate transfer of heat into the wheel.