Vintage Veloce
pro rider
For me the path with the learning is much of the fun. I may ending up ordering a shock for the bike, but now I know much more about what spring rate I would want.
Pulling the bolts was a pain, not as easy as I had expected. Here in dry San Diego, I'd never do it annually... but if you regularly ride in the rain... well maybe.I am wondering if removing the shock and greasing the joints makes sense 1x per year, or if the choice in grease has any impact....
Not bottoming. At the proper 30% rider sag, I don't expect to at normal riding pace and terrain either. Seems right on the money. Stock spring sag was actually not much different. Problem was it bound up on the very stiff final rate, just like the forks. It feels harsh because the shock just stops reacting smoothly and consistently.105N/mm ... The stock spring is claimed to be 100 to 150 N/mm.
That actually looks about right from your pictures as your spring seems to have approximately the same number of coils as the stock one. Assuming the same wire diameter that makes sense. The stock one's rate would increase as the coils bind.
Are you bottoming that new one out? I used 130N/mm and I'm lighter than you.
Very interesting.
I consider it bottoming whenever my zip tie ends up in the bumper (as pictured above), whether I feel anything or not.I'm half guessing that what you thought was bottoming was just the shock movement stopping cuz it was just getting so stiff?
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