fred_jb
Registered user
I've just been out to my freezing garage in the interests of science! From the very approximate measurements I have been able to make it looks like the angle change of the stanchion between extremes of suspension extension and compression is around 7 degrees. This is for my low chassis GS which has suspension travel of 170 mm. I would expect a bigger angle for the standard GS which has 190 mm of suspension travel, and bigger again for the GSA which has 210 mm of front suspension travel.
Because the full compression position should be the same for all three bikes it is possible to just add 20 mm and 40 mm to the fully extended measurement I took on my bike to see what the angle would be on the standard GS and standard GSA. These come out to approximately 8 degrees and 9 degrees of movement respectively.
What this of course does not tell us is whether the full range of angle change is centred within the maximum back and forth movement allowed by the joint link. For example if the fully extended position coincided with the stanchions being centred within the joint link rather than angled downwards by the maximum amount the joint link would allow, then the whole angle change due to compression would have to be accommodated within only half of the allowable movement within the joint link.
It is very difficult to judge this by eye, but I would expect all three bikes to be set up so that the stanchion is central within the joint link when 105 mm from full compression. The GSA would move 4.5 degrees in either direction, whereas the other two would move the same on compression but probably use less of the available angle for extension. In this case all three bikes would be equally vulnerable to damage to the crimps on full compression if the joint link cannot accommodate this amount of movement.
Fred
Because the full compression position should be the same for all three bikes it is possible to just add 20 mm and 40 mm to the fully extended measurement I took on my bike to see what the angle would be on the standard GS and standard GSA. These come out to approximately 8 degrees and 9 degrees of movement respectively.
What this of course does not tell us is whether the full range of angle change is centred within the maximum back and forth movement allowed by the joint link. For example if the fully extended position coincided with the stanchions being centred within the joint link rather than angled downwards by the maximum amount the joint link would allow, then the whole angle change due to compression would have to be accommodated within only half of the allowable movement within the joint link.
It is very difficult to judge this by eye, but I would expect all three bikes to be set up so that the stanchion is central within the joint link when 105 mm from full compression. The GSA would move 4.5 degrees in either direction, whereas the other two would move the same on compression but probably use less of the available angle for extension. In this case all three bikes would be equally vulnerable to damage to the crimps on full compression if the joint link cannot accommodate this amount of movement.
Fred
That sums it up then.