brunocrossley
Guest
Not strictly a GS thing I know, but I'm currently building a special from a twin shock RS, and would like to mount the upper ends of the rear shocks directly to the frame in the style of the older PD bikes.
Are the units inclined toward the centre line of the bike, or are they mounted parallel to each other. I've looked at lots of photos and the upper mounts appear to fasten directly to the main frame loop just below where the subframe brackets would normally be. Is that correct? Are the brackets in line with the frame tubes or are they offset outward?
On my 78 R100RS the upper shock mounts seem to be 15-20mm closer together than the standard lower mounts on the swinging arm and bevel box casing if the upper mounts were centred on the frame tubes. Or perhaps I've measured something wrong?
Alternativly do the lower mounts need to be moved inward? What about clearance between the tyre and the springs? Will the inclined shock idea only work with extended swinging arms?
Thanks
Mark
Are the units inclined toward the centre line of the bike, or are they mounted parallel to each other. I've looked at lots of photos and the upper mounts appear to fasten directly to the main frame loop just below where the subframe brackets would normally be. Is that correct? Are the brackets in line with the frame tubes or are they offset outward?
On my 78 R100RS the upper shock mounts seem to be 15-20mm closer together than the standard lower mounts on the swinging arm and bevel box casing if the upper mounts were centred on the frame tubes. Or perhaps I've measured something wrong?
Alternativly do the lower mounts need to be moved inward? What about clearance between the tyre and the springs? Will the inclined shock idea only work with extended swinging arms?
Thanks
Mark
