Cannondale Headshok Service Manual

The Headshok suspension fork was first introduced in 1992. It features 4 strips of needle bearings. With this design Cannondale has a system that rolls and does. Vintage Cannondale – Head Shok Information. The Headshok suspension fork was first introduced in 1992. It features 4 strips of. Manual Lock Out Indexed.

Speaking from experience I would almost certainly say that the oil will need replacing in the damper, which will mean new seals in the damper and this is something that will need know-how. Then there will either be the air spring which may be perfectly fine, so check it it holds the pressure. The sort of work required is a damper service and the telescope overhaul for the bearings/races to be cleaned, inspected and re-greased. Firmware acer liquid z120 atau z2 phone. Download el placer de leer y escribir irma ballester pdf free. I have four Cannondales, all with Headshoks so can guess what is needed. If you buy the castle tool and pin spanner you can take things appear to inspect but you really need to know when to stop because as you say the parts are discontinued and so a wrong move could render the fork dead if you don't strike lucky. That Eighty-Aid company look pretty expensive. Over here in the US we have a master mechanic in Mendon, NY that is a specialist and his work is fast, precise and extremely reasonable.

I have the same fork on a 2001 Jekyll. I live in Hamburg. The seals in the regular fatty DL70/80 set fit. You can also take seals from the hardware store for the air piston. They are a little smaller than the original seals, but the rubber tube is a little thicker, so it works.

The seals inside the oil damper are cannondale specific parts. Disassembling the needle bearing ist tricky, you need a good description and you have to build a tool that will hold the races in place, otherwise you will have problems to reasemble the fork. (Don't mix the races). I twisted my air spring 180 degrees, because it lost air every 3-4 days. Just removed the bottom plug and pressed it into to the other side.

Now the fork is perfect since days. Just taken delivery of two FATTY folks and one MotoFR fork, all of which have been fully serviced. That's new oil and seals for the dampers, clean inspect and re-lube races and bearings and all other necessary work you'd expect in a complete overhaul. The work is done by a Cannondale specialist that is well known in this forum. The price I paid for all three folks appears to be less than for one damper service at EightyAid. Das ist nicht gut!

In regards to the telescope dismantling. This would be a step requiring very very clear understanding of the task, special tools and skills.

If you get those bearings or races out of the original location then things could go south quickly. Each bearing is precision placed and these vary by microns I believe. I pay less than $100 per fork and sleep well knowing the job is down correctly. Better than spending $100 on tools and wrecking you folks. Yes, the telescope dismantling is hard work, but you will find a manual for that at sheldon brown. The first time it took me two hours to rebuild the complete fork.

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