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Shock oil

Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2001 8:30 pm
by Robert Kampas
I'm working on my shocks. Don't think anything had been done to them in over twenty years by the previous owner of my project 47 TC. But they do not leak. Rather than have them rebuilt I decided to leave well enough alone and just flush and replace the oil. I used 20 weight motocycle fork oil. I emptied the old oil, filled once with new, worked the pivot arm several times, drained the new oil and refilled. I did this for all four shocks. Now three of the shocks seem to have the same resistance when I work the pivot arm but the fourth one has much more resistance. The one that has more resistance seems to have about the same as all four used to have before I changed the oil. Are you following all this? Which is right? The three shocks that now have less resistance than before I changed the oil, or the one with the greater resistance to movement of the pivot arm? How do I end up with all four the same? Or does it matter? Thanks in advance... Cheers, Bob Kampas TC2544

Re: Shock oil

Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2001 11:26 pm
by DAI
Bob, Difficult to say. It depends on the damping effect of the 3 versus the 1. If 3 are the same, then one might assume they are correct, and the other is a problem. It could be that the filter(s) on the piston(s) of this one damper are blocked. I wouldn't necessarily decide to leave well alone, and there is no rocket science to these. Have a look at the articles on the special files area for Luvax damper maintenance. Regards, DAI TC 6132 --- Robert Kampas kampas@seanet.com> wrote:
> I'm working on my shocks. Don't think anything > had been done to them in > over twenty years by the previous owner of my > project 47 TC. But they do > not leak. Rather than have them rebuilt I decided > to leave well enough > alone and just flush and replace the oil. I used 20 > weight motocycle fork > oil. I emptied the old oil, filled once with new, > worked the pivot arm > several times, drained the new oil and refilled. I > did this for all four > shocks. > Now three of the shocks seem to have the same > resistance when I work the > pivot arm but the fourth one has much more > resistance. The one that has more > resistance seems to have about the same as all four > used to have before I > changed the oil. Are you following all this? > Which is right? The three shocks that now have > less resistance than > before I changed the oil, or the one with the > greater resistance to movement > of the pivot arm? How do I end up with all four the > same? Or does it > matter? > > Thanks in advance... > > Cheers, > Bob Kampas TC2544 > > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to > http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > >
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Re: Shock oil

Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2001 12:37 am
by C Sherriff
Message text written by DAI
>Difficult to say. It depends on the damping effect of
the 3 versus the 1. If 3 are the same, then one might assume they are correct, and the other is a problem. Assume can be broken down - making an ASS out of U and ME The council I WILL give is that the shocks should be fitted to the axles in pairs of the same resistance. Some air could be the problem - try another refill they should be quite stivv but this is difficult to quantify! Certainly a hard pull by hand. Clive

shock oil

Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2010 5:53 pm
by Sara Dahl
Hello Group - I think this was covered last Fall but for the life of me I can't pull it up. What is the correct damper oil for the piston Luvax TC shocks or something off-the-shelf that is correct. I assume it should be non-foaming but don't know about the weight. Please feel free to contact me direct rather than bomb the group. TTFN Sara [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: shock oil

Posted: Sat Apr 24, 2010 5:13 am
by Roger Furneaux
hi Sara - you need motorcycle fork oil which is non-foaming. comes in several weights, but the 20 seems about right. cheers Roger
On 23 Apr 2010, at 01:53, Sara Dahl wrote: > > Hello Group - I think this was covered last Fall but for the life of me I can't pull it up. What is the correct damper oil for the piston Luvax TC shocks or something off-the-shelf that is correct. I assume it should be non-foaming but don't know about the weight. Please feel free to contact me direct rather than bomb the group. TTFN Sara > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Shock oil

Posted: Tue Sep 19, 2017 6:12 am
by Bill Hyatt

Hi Roger,

As it happens I still have some Girling Official Piston Type Hydraulic Damper Thin Fluid! If anyone is interested and has the ability to analyze the fluid I can provide a sample.

 

Bill

TC 4926

Odessa, Fl