Just out of interest, does anyone here know what the standard spring rate is/was for their bikes and what spring rates a suspension expert/specialist has recommended and fitted to suit their weight or riding application?
I ask because I've been to a couple of track days and they offer a suspension set up service which they promote at the drivers briefing. The spiel they give at the briefing is that the standard bike is made to take a passenger and therefore the rear springs, for example, are much heavier than what's necessary for a solo rider doing track days.
Fair enough concept, I thought, however the Kawasaki workshop manual (not owners manual) offers the preload length of 180mm for the standard rear spring on my 2007 ZX10R for a 68kg solo rider without pillion or accessories.
While specifying the preload doesn't necessarily mean that spring rate is based on a 65kg solo rider without accessories I wondered why they would even specify such a figure if it wasn't far from the truth!
Logically, to me anyway, If you were really selling a bike with spring rates for a rider and passenger why wouldn't you specify settings for that exact scenario with your standard preload?
So I thought an industry suspension expert might give me a clue and when I got my steering damper rebuilt to race specs I asked the guy there and he said that the front springs on my bike were pretty good but that generally the back was a bit hard and needed a softer rate and closer to my weight.
fair enough....so seeing as I'm getting a new rear shock soon I thought I would do a bit of investigation on spring rates and found this site from race tech:
http://www.racetech.com/
So if you you click through sports bikes and look up your year and model etc, they give you some info on what the American version of the bike has.
The interesting part is that they allow you to specify your bike weight and your weight and give you a recommendation on what spring rates you should run.
Interestingly they reckin' that I the bike has an 8.3 kg/mm spring in the rear and with my weight and bike weight I should be running a 9.071 kg/mm spring!
That's a heavier than standard spring and I weigh only 70kg!
http://racetech.com/ProductSearch/2/Kaw ... 0R/2006-07
If I plug in a heavier rider of say 95kg...much heavier spring.
Anyway, I realise that motion ratios (or leverage ratios) for each model of bike are different (as well as bike weight and distribution etc) so direct comparison isn't possible or advisable but I was just interested in comparing straight changes on your own bikes to see whether the spring rates went up or down.
So anyone got any numbers?