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fox dhx rc4 shim stack?

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Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
HI,
i was servicing my shock('cuse im from iran and i have no access to servicing center) and accidently i droped my shim stack when i was opening it from the end of the piston rod so,
dose anybody know the shim stack setup for rc4 8.75*2.75 also its 2010 model?
thanks.
 

Udi

RM Chief Ornithologist
Mar 14, 2005
4,915
1,200
There are many different tunes each year so it is hard to know exactly which configuration you have.

The picture below might help get you started, the left side shows compression shims, right side rebound. The piston is shown compression side up (so the compression shims sit on that side). The piston bolt enters through the opposite side of the piston, and the rebound shims are generally thicker than the compression shims if you are stuck deciding whether a shim belongs in the rebound or compression stack.



Hope that is of some help, it should get you going again.
 

failure line

Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
There are many different tunes each year so it is hard to know exactly which configuration you have.

The picture below might help get you started, the left side shows compression shims, right side rebound. The piston is shown compression side up (so the compression shims sit on that side). The piston bolt enters through the opposite side of the piston, and the rebound shims are generally thicker than the compression shims if you are stuck deciding whether a shim belongs in the rebound or compression stack.



Hope that is of some help, it should get you going again.
hi and thanks for reply,
also can you recommend me a substitute oil rather than the fox 10w red?
one of my friends which been servicing a coupla rc4's said that i can use total lhm+ plus with no problem so what did you think?
thanks.
 

Udi

RM Chief Ornithologist
Mar 14, 2005
4,915
1,200
It's not ideal, LHM+ is a mineral oil (i.e. non-synthetic) whereas Fox Red 10wt is a fully synthetic oil, and its benefits are to do with shear stability - i.e. a better ability to maintain its permanent viscosity after being subject to high temperatures and forces. A low volume damper like a shock is pretty hard on oil.

Aside from that, the viscosity of Red is 47cSt@40C and LHM+ is significantly lower at around 18cSt - so you're going to have reduced damping. The temperature stability of LHM+ seems adequate so in that sense it will work, but I really would not recommend it.

Fox Red is the same as Silkolene "Pro RSF" 10wt so have a look around and see if you can get that. I doubt you will find many other alternatives that fit the factory specification.
 

Kanye West

220# bag of hacktastic
Aug 31, 2006
3,741
473
The BelRay closest equivalent of their HVI oil works fine. I think it's the 10w.
 

Udi

RM Chief Ornithologist
Mar 14, 2005
4,915
1,200
Bel-Ray HVI 15w, "48-51cSt" looks like it'd be the closest match. The 10w is "32-35cSt", would probably work okay too.
 

failure line

Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
thanks for all the replys.
i have access to motorex fork oil but in 5w,total,mobil,shell,castrol,motul and....but the problem is that the import company's here dont have all the versions available, for instance we have the fuchs but they dont have Silkolene "Pro RSF".
 

Steve M

Turbo Monkey
Mar 3, 2007
1,991
45
Whistler
thanks for all the replys.
i have access to motorex fork oil but in 5w,total,mobil,shell,castrol,motul and....but the problem is that the import company's here dont have all the versions available, for instance we have the fuchs but they dont have Silkolene "Pro RSF".
Check this list of oil viscosity and viscosity index (VI) for a whole lot of suspension fluids. Pick one that's available to you that has a high VI (over 250, preferably over 300) that has a viscosity (in cSt at 40C) between 35cSt and 50cSt.
http://www.peterverdone.com/wiki/index.php?title=File:PVD-ISO-Viscosity-Data.gif
 

failure line

Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
hi
thanks for the list
i changed the shock oil and felt it with air(150psi) butt the probelm is that is looses air and every time that i attach the pump it shows the zero psi also dose moving the piston rod before putting any air into it causes the shock to get air?
 

Udi

RM Chief Ornithologist
Mar 14, 2005
4,915
1,200
After pressurising the shock to 150psi, leave the valve cap off and drop it in a tub of water and watch to see if any air bubbles are escaping. If there is an external leak you should see it. If the valve core is leaking, you can replace it with a standard schrader valve core. It's also possible that it is leaking past the IFP o-ring internally, in which case you should replace that, however that's not common.

After assembling/filling the shock and setting the IFP depth, you should not move the shaft before pressurising it. This can definitely cause the oil to aerate, particularly if you move the shaft in the extension direction (as you draw a vacuum internally).
 

failure line

Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
i just filled the shock and set the ifp at 36mm because the shock is 8.75*2.75 and i was put the shims according to this thread:
http://www.ridemonkey.com/threads/anyone-have-stock-shim-stacks-for-a-fox-rc4.265673/(shims seems to be the same size in diameter and quantity)
and then pressurised it with the pump and after compressing the shaft the adjusments seems to work ok but then i attached it to the bike and after any adjustment i do shock just feels the same way,so soft that i can move the shaft just by pressing the saddle with my finger?
 

TrumbullHucker

trumbullruxer
Aug 29, 2005
2,284
719
shimzbury, ct
i just filled the shock and set the ifp at 36mm because the shock is 8.75*2.75 and i was put the shims according to this thread:
http://www.ridemonkey.com/threads/anyone-have-stock-shim-stacks-for-a-fox-rc4.265673/ shims seems to be the same size in diameter and quantity)
and then pressurised it with the pump and after compressing the shaft the adjusments seems to work ok but then i attached it to the bike and after any adjustment i do shock just feels the same way,so soft that i can move the shaft just by pressing the saddle with my finger?

link no work?
 

failure line

Chimp
Nov 11, 2014
8
0
After pressurising the shock to 150psi, leave the valve cap off and drop it in a tub of water and watch to see if any air bubbles are escaping. If there is an external leak you should see it. If the valve core is leaking, you can replace it with a standard schrader valve core. It's also possible that it is leaking past the IFP o-ring internally, in which case you should replace that, however that's not common.

After assembling/filling the shock and setting the IFP depth, you should not move the shaft before pressurising it. This can definitely cause the oil to aerate, particularly if you move the shaft in the extension direction (as you draw a vacuum internally).
i just filled the shock and set the ifp at 36mm because the shock is 8.75*2.75 and i was put the shims according to this thread:
http://www.ridemonkey.com/threads/anyone-have-stock-shim-stacks-for-a-fox-rc4.265673/ shims seems to be the same size in diameter and quantity)
and then pressurised it with the pump and after compressing the shaft the adjusments seems to work ok but then i attached it to the bike and after any adjustment i do shock just feels the same way,so soft that i can move the shaft just by pressing the saddle with my finger?