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MOTOBRICK.COM
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TECHNICAL MOTOBRICK WRENCHING In Remembrance of Inge K.
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The Motobrick Workshop
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Rebuild Progressive shock
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Topic: Rebuild Progressive shock (Read 7697 times)
conybeare
^ Motobrick Curious
Posts: 96
Conybrick
Rebuild Progressive shock
«
on:
May 29, 2011, 11:16:19 PM »
Anyone ever have a Progressive shock rebuilt? I'm wondering if this is something that a local shop would do, or if I need to send it in to Progressive. If anyone's got experience rebuilding them themselves, that would be good to hear as well...
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Saint Paul MN
Current:
Nothing :o
Previous: 2004 R1100S, 2009 Yamaha FZ6,1990 K75S, 1986 K75C, 1984 Honda VT500 Ascot, 1981 Suzuki GS250T
johnny
TrailBrakingThrottleWhacker
^ Quintessential Motobricker
Posts: 7652
Whacking...n...Chopping Sliding...n...High Siding
Re: Rebuild Progressive shock
«
Reply #1 on:
May 29, 2011, 11:46:44 PM »
greetings conybeare...
i knows of one moe who did his own rebuild... butts he has a machine shop n works with hydraulics... he just scored all the ch1t he needed... did the deed...
im thinking if it were me.. i would let progressive do it.. and make sure they know the actual weight of the moto + actual weight loaded + all that 1up + all that 2up... and if you are a slabb king or a carving fool...
then you will getts a top notch rebuild...
j o
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i parks my 96 eleven hundert rs motobrick in dodge county cheezconsin
frankenduck
Adrninistrator
^ Quintessential Motobricker
Posts: 5511
Re: Rebuild Progressive shock
«
Reply #2 on:
May 30, 2011, 12:33:04 AM »
I forget the details but I think the 412 isn't rebuildable but the 420 is. Either way you're just polishing a turd IMO. Are Progressive shocks better than stock? Yes. But that's like saying that a rapist is better than a murderer.
I think the best bang for your buck would be to get one of
these
. Make sure to tell them what your normal riding load (rider, passenger, baggage) is so that they can spring it properly.
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Once I had a Collie pup. Dug a hole and covered him up. Now I sit there by the hour. Waiting for a Collie-flower.
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conybeare
^ Motobrick Curious
Posts: 96
Conybrick
Re: Rebuild Progressive shock
«
Reply #3 on:
May 31, 2011, 07:43:37 PM »
Nice analogy. In that case, my bike is already a turd (lives outside, 63k, body damage, subjected to Chicago "roads"), so I may go ahead and polish it a little more...
Grad school budget = not great for upgrading parts :(
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Saint Paul MN
Current:
Nothing :o
Previous: 2004 R1100S, 2009 Yamaha FZ6,1990 K75S, 1986 K75C, 1984 Honda VT500 Ascot, 1981 Suzuki GS250T
bosozoku
Curious
Posts: 6
Re: Rebuild Progressive shock
«
Reply #4 on:
June 07, 2011, 08:42:52 PM »
See if these guys can do it for you-
http://www.gpsuspension.com/services/
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TECHNICAL MOTOBRICK WRENCHING In Remembrance of Inge K.
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The Motobrick Workshop
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Rebuild Progressive shock