Dyna Suspension upgrade
#1
Dyna Suspension upgrade
I've got an '06 Dyna Wide Glide, with the 49mm forks, and I'm planning on upgrading the suspension over the winter. I have 25K miles, and I am looking for a better ride & control. Ive looked at progressive shocks, Ricor valves & shocks, and Ohlins ($$!!) anyone with experience please let me know what worked for you.
Thanks.
Thanks.
#3
I cant say enough good things about my works suspension. I have the blacktracker rear shocks (+1/2") with triple rate springs up front. It is night and day over stock. I've said this before, but you just dont know how lacking the stock suspenion really is untill you ride performance shocks and springs. But i would say most shocks are going to be better than stock, save for the cheap progressives, i hear they are not much better than the stock. But thats all hear say on the progressive 412's. But im sure the top of the line progressives are as good as works, ohlins, ricors.
#4
#6
Looking for that last bit of handling finesse, I later installed a front and rear Sputhe Positrac.
I like my bikes to handle to their potential. What looks cool in the parking lot isn't important to me. As it sits now, my Dyna has zero handling issues at any speed or road condition. My only limitation is the floorboards dragging on curves, but I could probably eliminate that by going back to pegs.
I know that Ohlins are top of the line and have been the way to go for decades. However, I think that Ricor, with their patented inertia suspension, is a break through design that is hard to beat, not to mention that they are made in the USA.
#7
30mm Ohlins cartridges & Ohlins #6 work on my bike. After Daytona a brand new S&S 124 EFI will slip in between a set of my WideGlide C/F wheels along with the wide stance fork triple trees. Composite fenders will cover the 130 X 16" & 160 X 16" rear tires. Wheels/tires are next to the bike. Adapters need to be made for the rear as I am figuring right now @ 5:02 am. That is all I got.
Looking at Jamie's tuner kit last night.
Looking at Jamie's tuner kit last night.
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#8
For Performance...
I have Ohlins shocks on the rear and Ohlins 30mm drop-in cartridges in the front forks. Dual front brakes and 95" stage II build. With that set-up I have a 630 lb bike(an '06 Streetbob, btw) that keeps up with the sportbikes on Tail of the Dragon and lets me ride 11 hour days on cross country trips with no fatigue. Seriously- I hung out with two guys on Triumph Triple Sports for 6 hours and had no trouble on the back roads of western north carolina. And 10,000 miles this summer on long trips. I can't say enough about how much the Ohlins suspension has improved the bike. Check out MotorcycleMetal.com for different options on Ohlins products for Harley.
If I were starting on improvements today for my bike, I'd get the front end package Howard has on his website that includes dual brake set-up and Ohlins cartridges up front and Ohlins shocks on the rear. If $$ kept me from doing it all at once(it did), I'd do it over time. But I'd do it Good luck. Jay
If I were starting on improvements today for my bike, I'd get the front end package Howard has on his website that includes dual brake set-up and Ohlins cartridges up front and Ohlins shocks on the rear. If $$ kept me from doing it all at once(it did), I'd do it over time. But I'd do it Good luck. Jay
#9
Did you install both the Ricors and spring together or separately? I have the Ricors with stock springs and the OEM spacers cut down a half inch to account for the height of the Ricors and running the reccomended amount of 10wt Amsoil. I would say they do perform better than stock but I didn't get the OMG that's amazing feel that I was expecting. Although I have noticed that on a few larger bumps that I would expect the forks to bottom - they didn't, just absorbed the impact and kept on going.
#10
p51bombbay I did install the ricor and the triple rate springs at the same time.
I also used the 10 wt Amsoil.
The good thing about using the upgraded springs is that they are maintainable and also the rear Works Streetracker nitrogen shocks are also maintainable with the ability to be rebuilt fairly cheap compared to buying new.
I also used the 10 wt Amsoil.
The good thing about using the upgraded springs is that they are maintainable and also the rear Works Streetracker nitrogen shocks are also maintainable with the ability to be rebuilt fairly cheap compared to buying new.