• This topic has 45 replies, 33 voices, and was last updated 12 years ago by FOG.
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  • Suspension servicing- HOW MUCH!
  • FOG
    Full Member

    I have just been quoted around £170 for having my Rebas and a Fox RP2 serviced which lead to a heart flutter. How much can you realistically do yourself if you are a reasonably competent mechanic but not a brain surgeon?

    anto164
    Free Member

    I personally wouldn’t do a rear shock myself, but RS forks are some of the easiest forks to service, as all the step by step instructions are on the SRAM website.

    frogstomp
    Full Member

    Yeah, Rebas are pretty straightforward.. look for the tech manuals on the SRAM website..

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    steveh
    Full Member

    Look at j tech, their prices are much lower than many others and the guy James who does it is great.

    Scamper
    Free Member

    Mojo charge about £75 each i think, for front and back?

    Wally
    Full Member

    Easy to do and once done you are far more likely to drop lowers and lubricate the foams every so often. Research it, loads of videos available and instructions to print off. Buy 5/10/15wtfork oil from motorbike shop and fox pillow pack of fluid from ebay or cycle surgery (£1). £30 of oil with last about 6 fork strip downs. £170 is way too much.
    LoCo on here sounds very good though – if you want to send away.

    whinosp
    Free Member

    Think I paid about £90 from Mojo to have my DHX 3.0 serviced, with new bushes etc. Came back like a new shock, which improved my riding after speaking to the Mojo bod about my overenthusiastic preload and rebound use. Recommended, definitely worth the money fr rear shock.

    I did replace the oil seals on my Fox forks which improved their behaviour. Found the instructions on the web and took a couple of hours. Easy enough job.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    lot if it is just toreplace oile and service etc IMHO
    standard chards is about £20 to bleed brakes though so given that seems appropriate
    A local guy services forks for £20 + parts but manuals are all on line and it is not at all hard if you can get the instructions
    I do al lmine every Easter and in winter takes most of th day for 4 sets of forks at pootle in the sun speed.

    mulacs
    Full Member

    you been on the bevvy junkyard??! 😛

    lipseal
    Free Member

    I’ll ave what Junkyard’s been drinking. 😉

    stuartm555
    Free Member

    i’ve always done forks myself and just not bothered servicing shocks 🙂 seems to work for me – certainly no way i’d pay that much.

    craig1975
    Free Member

    learn to do it your self, save your self a fortune… you’ll be amazed how easy it is once you’ve done it… and at the end of the day if all goes wrong (which it want) you can alway send them of to get them done

    Rorschach
    Free Member

    Sat in front of the laptop watching Doctor Who whilst doing a full strip and rebuild of a set a Lyriks for a friend.Not rocket science but then I’ve been a shop mechanic for 7 years 😕 .A leisurely hour and a bit and £35 of new seals and oils so £75/80 is about right for retail.
    Most rear shocks need to be nitrogen charged and some more specialist tools so not really a DIY job.
    Exactly how much were you expecting/willing to pay? Are you a)just tight fisted or b)unrealistic in your expectations?

    Random
    Free Member

    I’ve always serviced my Fox Float rearshock as I found a really good little video on the Fox site that showed how easy it is to do. I’ve just looked now and I can’t find it – perhaps it made it too easy – no money for Mojo!

    I’ll contemplate my forks after reading this thread. Anyone got particular video recommendations?

    SamuelLam
    Free Member

    Try this for the rear shock:

    http://video.mpora.com/watch/KRTj23Tn7/

    bigyinn
    Free Member

    The only thing you can’t really do at home is the damper service on the rear shock. Mainly because it involves recharging the damping chamber with nitrogen.

    Rorschach
    Free Member

    An aircan service and a proper service are not the same thing you know Random.You get a little bit more than unscrewing the can and putting a bit of float fluid in for your £90 from Mojo 😉

    anto164
    Free Member

    Try this for the rear shock:

    http://video.mpora.com/watch/KRTj23Tn7/

    That’s just an air sleeve maintenance (I.E. the air seals) not a full service. A full service involves draining the oil, then refilling with oil, purging the air, and then nitro charging the shock.

    TBH, servicing yourself is cheaper, but the problems occur when all of a sudden there’s something broken in the fork or shock.

    bikewhisperer
    Free Member

    I’ve got 2 sets of Rebas that need doing:

    2 sets of dust seals: £14 each
    new bottle of 5wt: £10 (15wt I’ve already got)

    Air piston o-rings: ??? I know I need them, but don’t know what size they are until I dismantle a set, measure them, order them, and wait.. I could order the “air piston service kit” from Rock Shox for £20 quid.. But that’s 5 **** nitrile o-rings for twenty **** quid!!! So lets for the sake of ebay call the 2 quid per fork.

    So now I’m down 3 hours total (2 for labour, one for ebay), a few days wait for bits, and £21 per fork, and I’ve still not replaced all the damper o-rings that would be done on a retail service.

    I’d still do forks myself, but what you get the retail price I think is very fair. Rear shocks are a no-brainer though. They’re too intricate and fiddly and need too many special tools for me to consider doing anything more than an air can service.

    retro83
    Free Member

    Where do you get the dust seals for that price?

    timmys
    Full Member

    I’ve also been looking round for somewhere to get my forks and shock serviced in the last day or two. There was some great feedback on Evans a couple of years ago on here. Has anyone used them recently? Any idea if the same guy is still doing the servicing for them (Robin Walker)? For me the price of £120 (£75 fork, £45 shock), with no P&P (and no packaging/courier hassles) looks really tempting.

    grizzer
    Free Member

    You can get rockshox air sping and damper O rings for £8 off e bay, have serviced my reba’s with them and 2 month’s on everything’s OK…

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    bikewhisperer

    Are the seals shot? If not why replace them. A service is simply changing the oil. Anything else is repair of broken / faulty / damaged components.

    FOG
    Full Member

    Decided to have a go at the Rebas myself but the service section on the Sram website seems to be down so could anybody tell me weights and amounts of oil necessary?

    grizzer
    Free Member

    5 at 115 mils for damper and 15 at 15 mils for bottom of legs and 6 mils for top of air spring.. it differs for older models

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    Servicing rockshox forks really is quite easy. I usually measure the height of the existing oil and refill it to the same level. Put 15ml in the bottom of the lowers and a tiny amount in the air chambers.

    I find it really annoying Fox rears can’t be serviced at home.

    Rockshox provide instructions on doing their rear shocks
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQQY1G9HRP4

    I’m thinking about getting one for that reason. I’m fine if they don’t work quite as well, i mean its just a hobby, i’m not competing at world cup level or anything!

    BigJohn
    Full Member

    Unless you’ve got a Spesh Epic you don’t need to be a brain surgeon.

    timmys
    Full Member

    (Cheeky bump)

    Anyone got recent-ish experience of suspension services through Evans as requested above?

    Munqe-chick
    Free Member

    a riding buddy had a hugely negative experience with Evans servicing his Lefty, which came back locked out (too much oil?). Turned out our local Evans posted it to a different Evans to get their monkey to do it, so they had to send it back there to find out what had been done wrong and get it sorted.

    I’d rather have the hassle of postage and use a specialist like Loco, Mojo or TFT than trust someone at Evans to get it right.

    xiphon
    Free Member

    Wouldn’t touch Evans servicing with a barge pole.

    Send it to a fork specialist – Loco, Mojo, TF, J-Tech, etc.

    timmys
    Full Member

    Another hassle free option would be On Your Bike at London Bridge – any experiences?

    argyle
    Free Member

    Pedals in edinburgh are good and very reasonably priced. fixed my 32s up same day too. win!

    http://www.pedals-edinburgh.com/

    toys19
    Free Member

    TBH at that price for forks and shocks it seems ok. They have to pay wages, tools, materials, building overheads, insurance, training etc etc. And most importantly they need to make a profit otherwise there is little motivation to provide a service..

    GaryLake
    Free Member

    Otherwise, Loco Tuning is worth a look: http://www.locotuning.co.uk/

    Last time I used him he was cheaper than TFT and Mojo and he does a cracking job – not heard a bad word about him.

    bigjim
    Full Member

    There is a thread on mtbr with all the RS O ring sizes, I bought them for 2 forks from simply bearings and it came to £20 or so. There is one metric size they don’t stock for Dual air side so still need to hunt that down but had everything needed for my u-turns. Oil from chain reaction or a motorcycle shop and you are sorted. Not sure about the need to replace crush washers etc but I certainly don’t need to replace the alu top caps which come as part of the extortionate RS kits.

    Anyone used Enduro seals? Are they better than RS originals?

    D0NK
    Full Member

    anyone know where I can get a list of o-ring sizes?
    revelations in particular

    BigJohn
    Full Member

    10mm
    12.5mm
    15mm
    20mm
    25mm
    30mm
    32mm
    36mm

    D0NK
    Full Member

    EDIT: can’t decide if you are serious Big John, if serious how many of each please, if that’s just a list of generic o-ring sizes then maybe I should have worded my request better.

    Does anyone have a list of the o-rings (size and number needed) used in rockshox revelations dual air ’08 model.

    bigjim
    Full Member

    just do a google search for the mtbr forum thread, it comes up easily and goes into plenty detail. I bought from simply bearings who had all but one size in stock.

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    Search on ebay for “Reba seals”, they are the same as the Revealation ones. Someones sourced them all and sells them with crush washers for 8 pounds.

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