This document is intended to help you through the revalve process
Transcription
This document is intended to help you through the revalve process
This document is intended to help you through the revalve process of a Fox 2.5 shock. This was not sponsored or authorized by Fox. This is not intended to be a guide on valving recommendation or a set up guide for your particular car. This is a basic overview of the process. We just hope to take some of the mystery out of shock valving and give you a few reference points so you can take on this process. Our hope was to help out the average person interested in improving their ride. If you don’t know what your car needs (more or less rebound/ compression) then you might not want to attempt this. If you are going to attempt this, make small changes and then test. Don’t make a huge change and then go out and hit the whoops at 80mph. We used a Fox 2.5 7/8 shaft 16” remote reservoir coil over for this tutorial. Good luck and enjoy. Fox has designed a very user friendly rebuildable shock. Good luck, Jon Step #1 – Remove nitrogen pressure. Step #2 – Measure and note your preload for later installation. Step #3 – Zip tie spacers to avoid loosing them. Step #4 – Coil removal Step #5 – End cap removal Step #6 – Inner clip removal Push in the center piece to expose the ring better. I bent up some pliers to help with this clip. Step #7 – Shaft assembly removal Once shaft assembly is removed, keep shock tube upright (so you don’t spill oil). The valving process is different from the oil change process, so don’t spill your oil. Most importantly you don’t want to get air in the system (so don’t tip over the shock). I usually tape it to a table leg while I work on the piston assembly. Step #8 – Shaft disassembly Step #9 – Valving Identification – your factory set up will be engraved on the shock eye. Refer to Fox’s web site http://www.foxracingshox.com/fox_tech_center/index.htm#offroad. This will be your compression and rebound set up. Rebound Compression Step #10 – Valving layout This is the rebound stack laid out. In this change I added rebound by changing the 1.600, 1.425, 1.350, and 1.10 from .012 to .015. This was a fairly moderate change for rebound. Step #11 - Reassembly Step #12 – Torque nut to 30 ft/lbs Step #13 Install shaft and piston assembly. Top off oil in shock tube. Oil should drain from slot when pushing in piston assembly (do this slowly). If oil does not spit out through the slot, you still have air in the system. Step #14 – Shaft and clip install Depress the assembly enough to install the retainer clip. Then pull back on it to expose the threads for the blue end cap. Step #15 – Cap install Step #16 – Coil install Now extend and compress shock. The shaft should slide smoothly all the way out. If it jumps on full extension you probably have air in the system. If not then you are good. Install shock and charge with nitrogen to 200psi. You’re done…….go test it.