As I loaded the bike up, a previously dormant concern about the rear suspension re-emerged. (Of course we all find something to worry about and as I had sorted the other things that I had worried about, this came to the foreground!).
I took the fully loaded bike out for a ride at the weekend on an A road and down a local green lane and nothing terrible happened...but in the garage I could see the bike wallowed a little when I sat on it or took it off the sidestand. At 67 kgs (10 and a half stone in local parlance) I wasn't excatly testing the bike's limits.
I decided to contact the admirable Lukasz Tetich of T Tech, who recently fitted a Maxton unit on my Transalp and in my view is a star. By happy chance he could see me today in his new base in Newhaven. That would serve a dual purpose....allay my fears about the rear shock and also do a good 170 mile round trip on fast and medium roads, fully loaded.
I strapped the OEM shock and a spare spring and set off into the rush hour traffic, taking the A3 and M25 and M23/A23 and A27...trying to remember how wide I was loaded as I filtered!
As soon as I got there Lukasz and two colleagues moved in on the bike. Lukasz's reaction confirmed my fears....he said there was virtually no damping and possibly the spring was for someone (even) lighter than me!
The pictures tell the story...he decided that the unit needed a service as there was very little pressure, and fortunately he had a service kit for this older YSS unit. The oil that came out of it was pretty black! During the process he also revalved it to make it more effective and firmer, and fitted a more robust bumpstop from a Tractive unit. After some research it was concluded that the spring itself was actually suited to me and the main problem was the damping unit.


When I got back from a delicious coffee and croissant in an adjacent building the freshly serviced and rebuilt unit was being fitted and it was time to adjust the (previously almost non-existent) preload...a niggly task on a CRF as access is not ideal.
I was glad that i had brought the fully loaded bike as this allowed the team to set the bike up for exactly that weight....Lukasz warned me that if I remove all the bags i will need to think about the settings again, but for me the most important is to have a well set up bike for the main ride and toi know the rear unit is now serviceable and hopefully can be relied on.
The bike is now a bit taller but manageable....and the ride absolutely transformed, in particular the cornering. So glad I thought to do this, albeit belatedly, and that Lukasz could accommodate my late panic! And one of his team is a former (15 year) Honda moto mechanic so he was busy scrutinising the bike and also checked and lubed the swing arm bearings.
And for the keen eyed, the yellow object on the rear wheel is Lukasz's sag meter...which I almost rode away with (but fortunately he spotted it before it was too late!)
