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  • This topic has 57 replies, 17 voices, and was last updated 5 years ago by Veero.
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  • Rockshox Lyrik Settings
  • rickon
    Free Member

    Hey Chaps,

    With the latest debonair air assy, or just the 2019 Lyrik… How many spacers, and what PSI are you guys running at 150mm?

    I love a baseline to start with 🙂

    Cheers

    Ricks

    wishiwascalledsteve
    Full Member

    160mm 29er debonair, I’m 80-85kg on a Nukeproof Mega.
    Run 70-75psi, 2 spacers, rebound is 16clicks from open and compression is fully open.

    Used a shockwiz and it suggested everything was good as it is. I get full travel on most rides, but no harsh bottom outs

    chakaping
    Full Member

    170mm – 1 spacer – dunno the PSI.

    Compression fully open and rebound somewhere in the middle.

    Tracey
    Full Member

    29er 170mm, 1 spacer, 55psi, no compression, 9 clicks from slow rebound.

    rickon
    Free Member

    Thanks everyone.

    I should have said what I was running…
    72kg. 75psi, 3 tokens, 2 clicks of LSC.

    Using up all but the last ~1cm, after doing a day of uplift.

    chakaping
    Full Member

    Is it feeling good? I’d drop a token and/or a bit of pressure in the first instance.

    rickon
    Free Member

    I’m going down that exact route. At the moment it feels like my 2018 debonair Pike, which is a good thing, but that doesn’t have the 2019 debonair air assy – so should feel noticeably better.

    glenh
    Free Member

    You haven’t mentioned if it’s a 29 or 27.5 fork – this makes a big difference to the spring volume, and therefore pressure/token settings.

    rickon
    Free Member

    I didn’t think it made a difference, as the air spring assy is the same between 27.5 and 29er Lyriks.

    I’m easily wrong though!

    It’s a 150mm 29er Pike, 2018 version with the RCT3 charger 2 damper, but the latest 2019 Debonair Air Assy

    glenh
    Free Member

    The spring assembly (i.e the shaft & seal head) is the same for both, but the length of the fork above the seal head is different, so different air volume.
    This is why of you look at RS’s recommended number of tokens, it’s different for 27.5 and 29 forks.

    rickon
    Free Member

    This is why of you look at RS’s recommended number of tokens, it’s different for 27.5 and 29 forks.

    It’s different for Pikes, but for every other fork – including Yari and Lyrik it’s the same, regardless of 27.5 or 29.

    chiefgrooveguru
    Full Member

    Interesting, I guess something in the newer 29er castings corrects the positive air chamber volume to match the 27.5

    I’m running two tokens (stock) in a 2019 Lyrik RC2 160mm 29er. HSC open. LSC close to open (still fiddling). Rebound wherever it feels right. About 90psi which gives about 25% sag under 86kg of me and 20+kg of Turbo Levo. Feels really bloody good!

    rickon
    Free Member

    I need around 85 – 90psi to get less than 30% sag. I’m assuming the larger negative volume means you end up running more sag than usual, and need to go by feel and PSI, rather than sag…

    RickDraper
    Free Member

    Interesting, I guess something in the newer 29er castings corrects the positive air chamber volume to match the 27.5

    It changed with the release of the B1 2018 on Pike, they all use the same air springs to achieve the same travel regardless of wheel size.

    rickon
    Free Member

    Well … Had a razz around GT, and ended up with 70psi, 4 clicks of LSC, 2 tokens.

    30% or more sag… But the fork feels pretty uncontrolled and harsh with less sag.

    Felt pretty nice and stable down Trail Fairy, which is quite burly.

    I’ve never run that amount of sag, and usually like a high riding fork. But the Lyrik seems to work much better at lower pressures and higher sag point

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    That isn’t even that much compression you’ve added to make up for that amount of sag.

    Try running faster rebound than the ridiculously closed positions suggested on here, to keep the fork running in the softer part of it’s travel, remove a token to keep the ending stroke rebound more controlled and reduce the sag.

    The forks will feel harsh and uncontrolled because of how progressive the fork has been setup combined with the dead rebound, you’ll be packing down in the midstroke and building up a huge amount of force that will get returned to you by eating into the really progressive end stroke.

    A lot of people are riding these forks at the recommended PSI setting but with either only 1 token or all the tokens removed.

    rickon
    Free Member

    A lot of people are riding these forks at the recommended PSI setting but with either only 1 token or all the tokens removed.

    I tend to run my rebound as fast as I can, without it becoming pogo-ey.

    If I remove a token, at the sag I’ve got, I’m going to bottom out a lot. With the two tokens, I’ve got more space to run less sag and not bottom. Left with about 1cm with 30% sag, and 2 tokens after a general run down stuff, a mix of trail center and DH/Enduro trails.

    The feeling I had before was the same I’d get with too much HSC dialled in. But I’ve got the RCT3 damper, so it’d need re-shimming to adjust the HSC.

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    If I remove a token, at the sag I’ve got, I’m going to bottom out a lot. With the two tokens, I’ve got more space to run less sag and not bottom. Left with about 1cm with 30% sag, and 2 tokens after a general run down stuff, a mix of trail center and DH/Enduro trails.

    Run less sag and remove the token, simple. The fork will rebound quicker in it’s midstroke and stay in the softer part of it’s travel without gettimg the horrible kicking mule feeling that you get with overly progressive set ups.

    geex
    Free Member

    As above bin all the tokens and run less sag. at 30% you’ll have barely any platform to push from and it’ll shoot through it’s midstroke until it hits the stupid token induced ramp up.

    Felt pretty nice and stable down Trail Fairy, which is quite burly.

    No it isn’t. infact it’s just had a scrape/makeover and is smoother and easier than it ever has been.

    rickon
    Free Member

    No it isn’t. infact it’s just had a scrape/makeover and is smoother and easier than it ever has been.

    Tomato, Tomato…. I think it’s burly compared to the other trails in the valley.

    Run less sag and remove the token, simple.

    100 psi, and 0 tokens – the fork felt brilliant on less steep trails – but felt way to linear. Back up to 1 token, and dropped 5 psi to see how that goes at the Golfie.

    I still feel my pressures are way too high for my weight, even at 100 psi I’m just over 25% sag. 165lb shouldn’t be 100psi!

    geex
    Free Member

    depends how you’re measuring the sag.
    Let’s for a minute ignore your sag measurement.
    How much travel are you using with 100psi during a ride?
    and how much travel can you use by rolling along slowly and simultaneously slamming on the front brake while using all your weight/strength on the bars to compress the fork.

    I don’t really get how any air fork can feel way too linear considering coil springs are linear and no one ever complains about those.

    geex
    Free Member

    Just noticed this.

    I should have said what I was running…
    72kg. 75psi, 3 tokens, 2 clicks of LSC.

    Using up all but the last ~1cm, after doing a day of uplift.

    Assuming you mean inners uplift. 10mm off full travel sounds about right. Unless I mess up humongously there’s nothing big enough to bottom my forks at inners the way I like them set up. (got 2x 170mm lyriks – on E/Enduro bikes 80/85psi no tokens in either and I’m 20kg heavier than you).
    I prefer good support but a more linear spring over small bump sensitivity or pregression and find my Lyriks work better the harder I ride.

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    Should always be leaving an inch of travel left unused under normal descending conditions, as backup for if you huck to flat or do a proper nose dive into or off something.

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    100 psi, and 0 tokens – the fork felt brilliant on less steep trails – but felt way to linear. Back up to 1 token, and dropped 5 psi to see how that goes at the Golfie.
    I still feel my pressures are way too high for my weight, even at 100 psi I’m just over 25% sag. 165lb shouldn’t be 100psi!

    Have you considered that your shock pump is borked?

    Linear is good in the steeps, it means you have more midstroke support and thus a higher dynamic ride height and more travel left in reserve.

    You might noticing the spikey rebound and high speed circuits in the MK1 Charger damper as well I guess. The FAST damper conversion solved all the issues with the original charger damper, I believe it served as inspiration for the Charger 2 – but I don’t think you can get it anymore.

    rickon
    Free Member

    You might noticing the spikey rebound and high speed circuits in the MK1 Charger damper as well I guess

    I’m running the Charger 2 damper, just the RCT3 version, rather than the RC2.

    I did find the level of adjustment a bit poor on the LSC, with feeling like I’m between clicks.

    Cheers for the help so far chaps, I’ve never had an issue with fork setup. I’ve run Fox 32/34/36 Grip, RC2, FIT4… Rockshox MoCo, Charger 1 and 2 on SIDs, Reba, Revs, Pike.. MRP Stage…

    Which is why I’m struggling a bit with these for some reason.

    Linear is good in the steeps, it means you have more midstroke support and thus a higher dynamic ride height and more travel left in reserve.

    That’s generally what I prefer too, but was going through the travel a bit too quick at Inners yesterday. I could have upped the pressure, but I’d be running like 120psi then!

    bruneep
    Full Member

    On my FS I run my 160mm Lyriks with a luftkappe fitted at 55-60 psi no tokens. Forks also have Andreani Piston fitted, probably the best forks I’ve ridden. I’m no lightweight but running 100+psi would be awful for me

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    10er on your shock pump or air valve being borked.

    Are you actually using too much travel – or are you using more than usual off features you practice a lot on or is it a more general feeling of the fork collapsing beneath you in rock gardens?

    Maybe the transfer pot is blocked with shit and the negative spring has too much pressure in it? Meaning you are getting too much sag for a given pressure.

    glenh
    Free Member

    I still feel my pressures are way too high for my weight, even at 100 psi I’m just over 25% sag. 165lb shouldn’t be 100psi!

    That does seem quite high. I’m 155lb and run about 70psi and one token in my 150mm Lyrik with the new 2019 debonair piston (and charger 2 RCT3).

    doubledunter
    Free Member

    Problem with setting sag on a fork , you will practically never get the same reading twice, Ive found last couple bikes/forks Ive had the recommended pressure have been pretty much spot on nowadays ,150mm pike which I ran around 85psi and Fox36 around 89psi, I removed tokens on both forks and ran recommended psi, give or take here and there, that give me around 20%sag, any more the fork feels terrible, no support and sits far too far in travel and no confidence on any steeps, etc golfie, your 100psi seems over excessive, I would be putting about 75psi and trying it.

    Using up all but the last ~1cm, after doing a day of uplift.

    I wouldnt get caught up in this ,’using every bit of travel’, so what if you more left over, it will always be there when needed, does the fork feel good, do you feel confident, does the bike feel stable and balanced , maybe your riding doesnt justify using every bit of travel, no matter how rad you may think you are 😉

    chakaping
    Full Member

    Agreed re. sag, I just set a pressure and see how it feels and whether I’m getting close to full travel when I should be.

    rickon
    Free Member

    Fork felt fine today at the Golfie. Was pretty hard ground as it’s so cold, so a good test.

    With 95psi, and 1 token used all but about an inch of travel. Definitely feels better with less tokens. I may cut one token in half, as it felt buttery with zero, and much more stable with one.

    I don’t think the transfer port is blocked, it’s not sticking down, does equalise easily, and you can hear the chambers equalising.

    Pump could be borked, I’ll check it against my other pumps and my pressure guage. That’s a good shout indeed.

    In terms of excessive psi, it definitely looks it from the numbers, but it feels like my 2018 and 2019 Pikes with 65psi in. And I’m using as much travel as I would expect.

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    Awesome Rickon, sounds like we are heading in the right direction with your fork – has the fork been serviced yet? If not – might I suggest that it’s a very good idea to have a new fork serviced right out the box from new and the fork dynod.

    How many millimetres is the negative spring pulling the fork into it’s travel when the fork is under the weight of the bike, but without a rider?

    rickon
    Free Member

    It’s a brand new fork, I’ve cracked them open, greased the wiper seals, added new lowers oil, and changed the air assy – so that’s been well lubed too. I’ve not touched the damper, but that doesn’t feel cavitated or anything. I’ve not got a Dyno, so that’s not been done – I’m holding off sending them off just yet, I’d rather get a good time out of the box if I can before having them re-shimmed.

    No rider weight, minimal sag, maybe less than 10mm.

    I could definitely tell the difference between a 10 and a 7.5 fox volume spacer. So may well trim a token down by a quarter and see how that feels. I’ve got a load of them spare from the Pikes and the Lyrik!

    Veero
    Free Member

    I’m certainly feeling disappointed with my ’19 Lyriks. They feel so dull and lifeless compared to my Luftkappe’d Pike predecessors. Admittedly they have only had one ride and I have yet to drop the lowers off to see if they do actually contain any oil or grease. Also I’m sure there is a slight sloshing soundfrom the damper, so maybe it needs a bleed.

    I’ve ended up with LSC and HSC backed all the way off, 1 token with 70psi, once they’re moving they’re OK but through really rough rapid succession bumps my wrists are just aching.

    Wondering if anyone else is in the same sort of boat?

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    Does the harshness come on right from the get go – or are they packing down? Try increasing the rebound speed a bit.

    Peak force can also be increased by reducing the damping too much https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-ydae6yOdA

    So instead of just going “well this feels harsh” and backing off all your damping, ya’ll need to be bracketing your suspension properly on something like the top section of DH3 at Grenoside.

    Veero
    Free Member

    It’s the downwards motion feels more like a thud, then free movement like there’s a lot of excessive stiction or over damping (but HSC and LSC are all the way off). I like my forks to rebound as quickly as possible without being like a pogo stick. I don’t think they’re packing down as such.

    raybanwomble
    Free Member

    Seals need to be given time to bed it, it might need lubing or the bushings might need resizing. There could also be air trapped in the lowers, try burping them.

    You said that its after rapid successive bumps, what weight are you, how far off the recommended pressure are you? What sag? What travel?

    See the video above in regards to harshness.

    Mess around, try no or half a token, keep the same sag if you can measure it accurately, or add a couple of psi maybe, make the rebound a bit quicker (as it will now be slower in the deepstroke – so you can now run the rebound quicker around the sag point) and add a bit of compression damping.

    I’m convinced half the problems here are caused by people running progressive setups and running as much sag on the front as the back! That’s not the way it’s done guys, more sag and progression on the back, less sag and more midstroke support on the front!

    The whole point of these increased negative spring volumes is that you can run more linear setups with more midstroke support and an easier to tune rebound.

    rickon
    Free Member

    I do have the same thoughts as Veero. My Pikes have all been dead easy to get how I like. It does feel like the Lyrik is overdamped, but I’m interested to try bracketing the damping to see where I end up, as I suspect the high negative volume changes how they react compared to the Pike.

    I cut down a token last night, so running about half a token as zero tokens felt dead plush but the support was lacking, without upping the Psi a lot.

    I also run my rebound as fast as I can without it losing traction, I tend to start with a decent wound on and then wind it off on repeated trails.

    glenh
    Free Member

    I’ve bought some lighter oil to put in the damper for my Lyrik since I feel it’s a little over damped for me, but I haven’t got round to changing it yet.

    jonswhite
    Full Member

    2019 Lyrik RC2 at 150mm
    130 psi (96kg + gear)
    25% sag
    2 Formula neopos
    HSC +1
    LSC -7
    Rebound -6

    Feels pretty good – supportive and only getting to full travel when I’ve been stupid in the Alps.

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