| R100GS Race Tech Gold Valve |
| Written by Scot Marburger | |
| Monday, 27 February 2006 | |
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Seems like for years I've been hearing about a mysterious "Gold Valve" cartridge emulator that would transform the forks on the GS into race quality works of art. I was curious enough that, when Tom McBride posted a note on the GS mailing list that he was looking for someone to split a Gold Valve kit with him, I decided to try one out. Tom had done all the leg work, calling Race Tech to find out which parts were needed and how much they cost. We ended up with the Harley Showa 41 mm kit, Race Tech part number FEGV S3802. He even forwarded me the install notes put together by another GS lister, Jorge Carbo (I've converted Jorge's original Word document into PDF so everyone can read it). Jorge's notes are good, but they say one picture is worth a thousand words, and I'm hoping this page helps answer the questions others might have related to the install. The Gold Valve replaces the compression damping* function of the brake side fork leg on the R100GS (for those of you unfamiliar with the pecularities of the GS front suspension, rebound damping is handled by the left leg). The valve works by modulating the flow of fork oil through holes in the valve body. At slow fork speeds (like when you aren't hitting any bumps) the oil flows through a small hole in a washer in the middle of the valve. The hole is only about .12" in diameter and doesn't let much oil through, so when the bumps get bigger, something has to give. That something is the washer, which unseats from the valve body and lets oil flow around its outer edges. The spring you see on the right side of the valve makes sure that the washer returns to its seat when the bump is done. The spring also controls how far the washer moves, allowing some fine tuning of the valve. In fact, the Gold Valve comes with both 40 pound/inch and a 64 pound/inch springs (Race Tech recommends the 40 pound/incher, so that's what I installed, with three turns of spring preload).
I started by removing the cap from the end of the front axel, then loosening the axel pinch bolts (all four of 'em). Then I put a jack under the skid plate and lifted the front wheel off the ground. Chances are the wheel will be off the ground to start with, but the jack ensures that the front end won't come down unexpectedly. At that point it was it was a simple matter to pull the axel, let the front wheel drop, and roll out from under the fender. My bike has a low fender, as only real dirt bikes need a high fender, and we all know that the GS is as much a dirt bike as a pig is a ballerina. As such, the lower fender keeps rain and road muck off me and the bike much better than the poseur high fender ever could. But to get the fork leg out I had to remove the four bolts that hold the fender on, disconnect the brake caliper from the fork leg, and move the whole mess up so I could get at the two bolts that hold the fork brace to the right leg. That's not such a big deal, and it saves opening up the brake line and getting fluid all over the floor. I used a bungie cord through one of the caliper mounting holes to hang it and the fender from the 'roo bar. At that point it was a simple matter to remove the two bolts that hold the fork brace to the fork leg. It was a good time to drain the fork while the bike's holding up the fork leg. Having gushed fork oil all over the floor on several previous occaisions, I decided to take it easy on pulling the drain plug. Toward that end I made sure that the drain screw covered part of the drain hole when it came free of the threads. Tipping it a bit deflected the I put the axle back into the slider so I'd have something to keep it from turing and removed the damper rod bolt from the bottom of the slider. I made sure that the slider stayed over the drain pan, as some fork oil still remaind in the tube. Doing this before removing the fork tube nut lets the fork spring keep pressure on the damper tube, and that keeps the damper tube from turing. It's easiest to remove the fork tube top nut before dropping the tube out of the tripple clamps. I To get to the fork nuts I had to remove the handlebars, and to protect the tank I just removed it. I put the forks at full left lock before engaging the 30 mm socket, and firm pressure with a breaker bar had the fork loose without much trouble. I used steady pressure on the nut so it wouldn't go flying when it came out of the last thread, as the fork spring is under a couple inches of preload. The As a last step I loosened the lower pinch bolts and wiggled the fork tube until it came out of the tripple clamps. Inverting the tube over the drain pan let the spring and damper rod slide into my waiting hand, and the little dribble of fork oil landed in the pan.
Now it's not necessary to remove the spacer from both fork tubes, but I wanted both on hand to keep track of how much to shorten the right one. The idea here is to get the total stack height of the right spacer and Gold Valve to equal the stack height of the original spacer. When I Race Tech recommends using a tubing cutter on the spacer, and thats the way to go unless you've got a lathe handy. I shortened the the tube with a hacksaw, to within a quarter inch of the desired length, then faced it down in the lathe to the final length. A steady rest kept the thing from flopping around too much. With the first round of butchery complete it was time to turn my attention to the damper rod. As it comes from the factory, the damper The drilling left the edges of the holes with some pretty big burrs, especially on the back side of the holes. This was true both where the holes broke through on the back side of the damper rod, but also on the inside of the rod. I used a Dremel tool with a little spherical burr to smooth off the holes and leave a champher at the edges. I found I could reach the inside of the new holes not only through the holes themselves, but also through the original hole. That made it pretty easy to clean off the burrs, but as a final measure I used a fine file to smooth the tiny burr raised by the Dremel. A few squirts of contact cleaner and some compressed air had the tube clean and chip free, both inside and out.
First I dropped the damper rod down the fork leg, making sure it bottomed in the slider by giving it a few side to side shakes. Then I put a new sealing washer on the damper bolt and threaded it into the damper rod, but I didn't At that point I could slide the fork leg back into the tripple clamps and snug up the lower pinch bolts. I left the fork tube proud of the upper tripple clamp until I torqued the fork tube bolt home, then dropped the tube in the clamp until the top of the fork tube bolt was flush with the top of the tripple clamp. Then I torqued the top pinch bolt and loosened the bottom one. Next I reattached the fork brace, repositioned the fender and caliper, and reinstalled their respective mounting bolts. I made sure that the brake shoes were pushed back into the caliper, then reinstalled the front wheel. The cap on the end of the axel was bolted on, and I removed the jack and bounced the front end up and down a few times to let things realign properly. Then tighten the axel and fork tube pinch bolts. Remove the filler plugs in the fork top bolts if they're not already out, and fill each leg with 15 weight fork oil to the BMW spec: 430-450cc for the right hand leg, 400-420cc for the left (as seen sitting on the bike). After all that I was sure hoping that the Gold Valve would live up to its reputation, and after some back road blitzing I wasn't dissappointed. No, the change wasn't pronounced or revolutionary. But the harshness I'd experienced after going to 15 weight oil on the right (compression) side was gone, and there seemed to be less dive when I clamped down hard on the big M.A.P. rotor. The real test will come the next time the GS goes crashing over the rocks, but that'll have to wait a few weeks. * It's damping, not dampening. Dampening is what happens when it rains. |
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| Last Updated ( Tuesday, 28 February 2006 ) |