Stage I involved widening the machine to make it more
stable. This month we take the plunge into mini-quad shock
upgrades. This stage of the upgrade series can be most expensive,
but fortuitously, offers the most noticeable improvement over a
stock machine. The article below will attempt to shed some light on
what makes the difference between a stock shock and a set of
performance shocks, and provides some insight into why mini
owners ought to seriously consider them.
Stock vs Performance
When it comes to a mini-quad suspension, the
manufacturers not only have to design a shock to handle the worst
case scenarios such as really heavy riders hitting really hard
jumps, but they need to do it in a cost effective manner. And the
needs of most recreational riders are quite different than a racer
or aggressive trail rider. The reality is that very few youth ATVs
(maybe less than 10%) will ever be used in competition. Why inflate
the cost of the machine by another five hundred dollars to satisfy
the needs of the minority purchaser?
A comparison of stock Kasea front
shock (top) and Works front shocks.
So the OEMs have developed decent shocks that
offer reasonable compliance over the most drastic conditions. They
do this by providing a very stiff shock spring and very little (if
any) damping. This translates into a very rough ride for most mini
riders and very little useable wheel travel. For young recreational
riders and racers this means landing jumps with a hard thud which
can fatigue the rider or cause a lack of control, but also stresses
the suspension and chassis- sometimes to the point of
failure.
This shortcoming was not lost on
the suspension aftermarket community. Companies such as Works
Performance have developed shock absorbers to directly replace the
stock "toy" shocks. Based on a rider's weight, riding style/level,
and ATV configuration they will build a custom set of shocks to
offer dramatically improved performance over stock. The shocks are
uniquely built with customized valving and a spring rate that
maximize the available travel of the suspension for a given
rider.
How Shock Absorbers
Work
The role of the ATV shock absorber
is two-fold: to support the weight of the ATV in a resilient
manner, and to dampen the motion of the wheel. The first part is
relatively easy- that's what the spring is for. The second part is
usually what's absent on stock shocks and where all the technology
and sophistication lies.
Figure 1. courtesy
Work Performance
When the shock is not moving the
pressure on each side of the piston is the same. The check ball
acts as a valve sealing the piston. Behind each ball (there are
three) are springs which are all different- going from light to
stiff. The stiffness of the spring determines how much pressure
will have to be created to open the valve.
Damping is the shocks ability to slow the
motion of the shock extension or compression and is needed for a
few reasons. Consider an ATV coming off a serious jump. Without
damping the spring would need to be sprung more heavily since the
only thing resisting bottoming of the suspension is the spring
force. On smaller jumps, the same undamped suspension will seem
unduly stiff and uncompliant. Additionally, the shock controls the
wheel motion over rough terrain and jumps in an effort to maintain
contact with the ground.
Damping of shock
absorbers is achieved by forcing oil from one side of the shock
absorber piston to the other. The size of the passage controls how
quickly the oil can pass and therefore controls the speed of the
piston for a given load (pressure). As the suspension compresses,
oil is pushed from the top of the shock past the piston into the
bottom part of the shock. As the suspension rebounds the oil is
pushed back up into the top of the shock.
Figure 2. courtesy
Work Performance
When the quad hits a bump, the
shock shaft starts to move through the oil. This causes pressure on
the front side of the piston. How fast the shaft moves determines
how much pressure there is. If the piston is moving slowly, then
only one ball compresses its spring and allows oil to flow around
it. If the piston moves quickly (higher pressure) then more than
one ball will open allowing more oil to the other side of the
piston.
There are two types of damping- compression
damping and rebound damping. Compression damping occurs while
landing jumps and hitting bumps. Too little compression damping and
the shock will bottom out; too much and the shock will seem harsh.
On Works shocks compression damping is handled by four-stage
valving, which means very simply that the flow through the passages
is controlled in a way that provides a nearly linear relationship
between shock velocity and damping, thus avoiding overdamping
during really hard jolts.
Rebound damping
is two-stage and controls how quickly the shock will move back down
after being compressed. Too much rebound damping and the shock can
"pack" on tight whoops (the shock can't extend enough before the
next hit), and too little might allow the back end to kick up as
the ATV leaves jumps.
Proof is in the
Puddin'
Installation of the shocks is
dead simple- in our Kasea Skyhawk project machine they were a
drop-in, direct replacement. Works Performance was provided with
the particulars of the intended machine which in our case meant
informing them that we had +2 A-arms, stock tires/wheels, and a
stock swingarm. This info is critical in calculating the leverage
ratios between wheels and springs. Should this data ever change (or
rider details), Works can revalve the shocks to compensate.
After installation, the difference was immediately
noticed by simply doing the "garage test" of bouncing on the pegs;
the quad moved up and down easily with much more effective travel.
Picking up the rear end of the machine and dropping it from a
distance of a couple feet returned a buttery "pooof". Even at this
point, the new shocks seemed night and day different than the
stockers.
But a testimonial from the
machine's young pilot would be the final word, so off we went to
the track with "Zack-man", our 7 year-old test rider at the
controls.
After a few laps of the AMA
motocross track, we quizzed the speechless Zack-man on the virtues
of the new suspension:Kids Korner:
So, Zack, what do you think of the new shocks? Zack-man: "...uhh,... well, ... they were great."
Translation: The Works shocks worked beautifully. With the added
suspension travel and compliance they made me more confident over
jumps, and actually improved my lap times.
Zackman taking the re-sprung
Kasea through the rhythm section.
Kids Korner: "Do you think it was an
improvement over the stock shocks?" Zack-man: "yah. totally"
Translation: The two are not even in the same category. When I
used to come down on jumps it was brutal, sometimes coming down so
hard I'd nearly bash my helmet in the bars, and then nearly crash
as I try to recover. The Works shocks are like a breath of fresh
air. Kids Korner: "Any
remaining comments?" Zack-man: "uhmm..."
Translation: The Works shocks are quality pieces- machined
billet aluminum ends, nitrogen charged, oil-emulsion shocks that
are likely to suck up all the punishment I intend to serve
them! Zack-man: "Can I
have some ice cream now?">>>> Next Month- The finishing touches such
as steering dampers, chain tensioners, and extended
swingarms.
•
Contact
Information
Works Shocks
21045 Osborne Street
Canoga Park, CA, 91304
Phone (818) 701-1010 Fax (818) 701-9043
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