Tiger 900 Gt Pro Front Suspension

Discussion in 'Triumph General Discussion' started by learningtofly, Sep 20, 2021.

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  1. learningtofly

    learningtofly He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
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    Sep 25, 2018
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    Just looking for a bit of advice here, having done about 800 miles on the Tiger since acquiring it. It's a lovely ride for sure, but one thing I've noticed is that, under hard breaking, the forks have a tendency to dive a bit and then give me quite a bounce when they decompress. It's far more noticeable than on any of my Street Triple, R9T and Thruxton, and it can be slightly disconcerting.

    I'm not really sure if this is a characteristic of the set-up of adventure bikes compared to other genres, or whether I should probably try to adjust the rebound a bit. For info, I'm relatively light at about 160 lbs plus gear, so I'm not exactly putting the forks under undue pressure.
     
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  2. Notso

    Notso Senior Member

    Dec 17, 2018
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    This is interesting, I have been watching tons of reviews about the 900 range and there are a few fairly downplayed comments about the tendency to dive under braking. It wasn't clear on the video if it was front brake only, does using the back brake and front together balance the bike at all?

    Interested to follow this thread, I have deposit down on an 850 so will pay attention when the test bike is available, unfortunately it is a 900 but hopefully close enough in character.
     
  3. andypandy

    andypandy Crème de la Crème

    Jan 10, 2016
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    Perhaps a set of progressive springs may be the answer at some stage ?
     
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  4. learningtofly

    learningtofly He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
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    I don't think I've noticed a difference when the back brake is applied too (and I did have to implement an emergency stop over the weekend, when I used both brakes). From what I can tell, it happens under hard braking pretty consistently.
     
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  5. Hubaxe

    Hubaxe Good moaning! aka Mr Wordsalad :)

    Mar 25, 2020
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    Next fork flush, ask for higher viscosity 10 => 15
    Trail have softer suspensions. As the rear suspension has also higher course, breaking will raise up rear and accentuate the mass transfer to the front.
    For road use, it's common to put heavier fork oil.
    If oil is not enough, as Andypandy suggest, new springs.
     
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  6. learningtofly

    learningtofly He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!
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    Got you, thanks :)
     
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