Verslagen and Gary, thank you for your replies. Gary, I really appreciate your contribution to this discussion. You really seem to be adding something here, especially since I have been wanting to add MORE oil than spec.
. I will certainly consider adding your ideas to my suspension design ponderings.
I really got frustrated (MAD!) at some of the people here. I kinda abandoned this thread for a while because of it. They don't seem to respect me or what I have to say. They can't handle it when some newbie comes in and questions their authority and conventional wisdom. If I have to blaspheme the mythical bike gods in Valhalla, then so be it.
I'm bustin' through.
If they are
really in authority, there is no question that can shake them anyway.
That is what being a good leader is about. You're not a leader because you say so, but you're a leader because people find you fitting to follow. Conventional wisdom is good and all, but it only goes so far.
Here's what this discussion is worth-- No, really!
Here is officially what this discussion is about: what kinds of oils can one safely use in the Savage front forks in order to accomplish a certain goal in certain conditions without unreasonable risk of mechanical damage or personal harm?
What kind of McGuyver fork oils are available off the garage shelf? What ingenious make-do oils can be used in the Savage front forks without unreasonable risks and problems Now, not all of them are going to be good for all conditions, and there could be sacrifices in quality since not every aspect is designed for use in motorcycle forks. But, seriously,
do you actually trust manufacturers to give you something painstakingly designed for your motorcycle forks? Every single time?
Here's a wake up call to those who worship the industry and it's conventional wisdom: Fork oils vary WIDELY in their properties, at least from my perhaps shallow observation.
Look at this chart.
http://mahonkin.com/~milktree/motorcycle/fork-oil.htmlSome of these fork oils report rather mediocre viscosity indices, compared to ATF or good synthetic motor oil. A few have VI's no better than, or worse than regular hydraulic oil
. Some of them have extraordinary numbers, though, so one can't make sweeping statements. I can say that when you try that next brand of fork oil only to find your forks stiff as a steel rod the next cold ride, you know you bought the wrong oil.
Some of you are going to pooh pooh this whole discussion away and call me a young fool. Well, those fellows can find another thread to play with.
.
Let it be known, however, that if there were a good study/ experiment (probably not something for me to do in particular) done with various oils with proper research to back it, we could throw in an index of suitable oil mixtures, complete with their strengths, weaknesses, pros, cons, side-effects, suitable conditions, contraindications, hazards, limitations, and the like, along with relative rank so that we know which ones are best all around. There could be a use for my musings. You could throw them in the tech documents.
I tend to be OCD about things, but I have to admit, a lot of things, while not ideal, while possibly risky in theory and statistics, oftentimes-- don't mean a thing.
Since Gizzo says I can put custard in it, well, I encourage him to ride the first custard-forked Savage!
It might just work (for awhile, anyway
), and be funny too
.