Another vote for Hyperpro (emulsion in my case). I fitted an uprated rear and standard front to my 1100 last summer - transformed it and performed faultlessly on a 2500 mile two up tour around the alps last September.
Spot on
Rear spring rate is crucial
If you're over 15 st you need a heavier spring rate
If you ride with a pillion, you need a heavier spring rate again
If you ride with loaded alloy boxes, you need a heavier spring rate
A combo of the above and you need a heavier spring rate

I've had both and can't recommend any of 'em. In fact I'd stay stay away.
Öhlins is a nice on-street strut made to look visually good, indeed performs well on-road but is very fragile and unreliable offroad - too brittle and lightweight materials (I've had my Öhlins split in two in Pakistan)
Wilbers is like a low-blow - doesn't perform particulary well and rather utterly unreliable - multiple design flaws with the piston rod (coating) and sealing mechanism (I've had mine pissing out oil in just 100km of hard stuff in South-America).
Maybe recommend Öhlins only if you want to sell the bike quickly - so the bike looks tempting for a unexperienced rider with those fancy yellow colored struts giving better impression.
If you want a high quality product, robust and reliable yet something performs virtually the same as finely tuned Öhlins on-road and definitely beats it offroad it's Hyperpro. Particulary the Hyperpro "3D" models where oil and gas are separated (the non-emulsion type) making it more reliable and functional design overall. Particulary if you want to keep your bike for a long time and ride it like you stole it over humongous distances and not worry about the shocks all the time - nothing beats the Hyperpros IMO.
Hyperpro's were the only shocks I couldn't destroy in exreme conditions in Trans-Africa and Yemen/Oman ride, progressive springs work wonders in hard offroad (no bottoming outs like Öhlins and Wilbers even if you have spring ratings and dampening right for the weight and conditions - they still too often bottom out because the linear spring has no countering "stopping effect" like the progressive spring on Hyperpro) yet they're superb on road as well when you set them straight (3D models have high- & low-speed dampening and rebound ajustments over wide range). Having owned them all with all the bitterness and hassle I can say the only pity is that the Hyperpro doesn't have the massive hype- and PR-machine behind like Öhlins or Wilbers (too much PR and hype was the very reason I was stupid enough to buy mine anyways) since IMHO Hyperpro's really do deserve the credit for their ingenious design and vastly superior reliability - considerably more robust main body, thicker pre-dampener, stronger rebound limiter, higher quality rod coating (Wilbers polishes out quick, Öhlins relatively soon after), thicker rods, robust main seals, more angular tolerance and progressive springs as stock.
Anyways, just me 2c.
Margus
You missed an option out.... what if I weigh less than 70kgs!![]()

You need to resign from this forum, you clearly aren't a proper Tosser. 11 stoneyour only half the size of many a Tosser. Or eat lots of pies
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perfectly summed up.
btw...I was one of the first here years ago to advocate Hyperpro over Ohlins sheep.
I am really interested in this thread but need to know which suspension to consider for a very different reason. My problem is not handling etc. but height. I have a new GSA LC and am 5ft 9in tall. I can very nearly touch the ground flat footed on both sides but theres no real weight taken up. By this I mean that although my heels make contact with the ground they take no weight.
I would love to hear your thoughts.
I would love to hear your thoughts.