Dave
YaBB Moderator ModSquad
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SuzukiSavage.com Rocks!
Posts: 18104
Camp Springs, Kentucky
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I have been down that road.....and I am still there!
Raising the back and dropping the front does make a significant change in the way the bike steers as you enter the corner - I am not sure what affect the cornering ability once the bike is leaned over....it may not make the bike any faster around the curve unless you are really one who pushes the limits and scrubs the rubber off right to the tire edge......the forward pegs are usually the limiting factor in how far you can lean.
When I ride a stock Savage and set up for a turn, it feels to me like the bike "flops" over into the turn.......it takes me a few miles of turns to get used to the feeling.
My bike is lowered 2" up front (1.5" raised fork tubes and 0.5" spacer to reduce travel), has an 18" wheel, and I run a lower profile 90/90-18 front tire. I have raised up the back with 13.5" and 18" rear wheel with a 130/70 on a 3.5" wide rim or 120/80 on a 2.5" wide rim.
My bike now steers into the corners more like a touring or sport touring bike - however it is not as willing as a sport bike is.....there is just too much fork angle and trail, and the short clip-on handlebars do require a bit more force to make things happen. The bike handles well and it feels very stable. I like the way the bike steers, and the only time the bike is jittery is the couple of times I tried to see what my top speed is for the bike....as I get close to 100mph the bike become very light in the front and it becomes jittery and wants to wander - it is obvious the bike is getting very light in the front.....could be that the big 8" headlight is just too big for making stable speed attempts!
If you want quicker steering - I would lower the forks as much as you can, get lower profile/smaller tires (90/90-19 front & 130/90-15 rear), get longer shocks like the Intruder 800 shocks - you can try all those changes without having to change rim sizes. I am not sure what this will do to the look or comfort of the bike - these changes will make the bike look less like a backward leaning cruiser....and will increase the forward slope in the seat.
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