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Main Area => General GS500 Discussion => Topic started by: stefman722 on January 09, 2005, 11:33:15 PM

Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 09, 2005, 11:33:15 PM
hey guys,

Well i am replacing my rear shock, for the reason that i ride 2 up sometimes, i wish it wouldnt bottom out! So, what are my options. According to the search i did on the site;

katana rear shocks will work with no problem. What i want to know is if ANY year katana rear shock will work. i have a 500F and i hope that wont affect anything. Please let me know.

Thanks Guys.

Stefan
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 10, 2005, 09:28:20 PM
Bump
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: 96gs on January 10, 2005, 09:33:03 PM
I'm not sure bout any year, I think they all work. Just make sure it doesn't have many miles on it. I recently put one on my bike and its a miracle how well they work.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 10, 2005, 09:47:03 PM
where did you get it from? Cauz there are many on ebay, but i dont wanna get screwed over. So any help i could get i would appreciate.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: 96gs on January 10, 2005, 10:03:41 PM
Got it from eBay. $30 for a 2002 Katana 600 rear shock with I think 8600 miles on it.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 10, 2005, 10:43:30 PM
how was the install. Did you do it yourself? let me know..
Thanks
Stef
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: 96gs on January 11, 2005, 06:00:28 AM
Well, no I didn't, my Dad did but I watched everything he did. From what I saw it gets really tough getting off the bolts that keep the stock shock in place.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: pantablo on January 11, 2005, 10:45:14 AM
as long as you remember that the upper bolt is accessed through the plastic cap covered hole in the frame and you have sufficient leverage in case the bolts have been there long time...you should be okay. It took about 20 minutes when I did it.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 11, 2005, 02:17:19 PM
Quote from: pantabloas long as you remember that the upper bolt is accessed through the plastic cap covered hole in the frame and you have sufficient leverage in case the bolts have been there long time...you should be okay. It took about 20 minutes when I did it.

Yeah, my bike is brand new, so it shouldnt be that hard to take the bolts out. So any year katana shock will do?
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: pantablo on January 11, 2005, 02:35:10 PM
well, I dont know for sure how far back you'd want to go but I'd try to get a 2000+ shock, just because of the potential mileage on it. I had bought a 2001 shock for my 2001 gs, coincidentally. Get the newest you can find.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 11, 2005, 04:05:46 PM
alright, ill do that. Do any of you know how much the dealer would charge for a brand new one?
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: 96gs on January 11, 2005, 04:08:07 PM
Quote from: pantabloas long as you remember that the upper bolt is accessed through the plastic cap covered hole in the frame and you have sufficient leverage in case the bolts have been there long time...you should be okay. It took about 20 minutes when I did it.

Yea, we could have used that one, we were trying to get to it from the lil area by the rear tire, then my dad found the cap and i juts poked it out.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: pantablo on January 11, 2005, 04:10:11 PM
Quote from: stefman722alright, ill do that. Do any of you know how much the dealer would charge for a brand new one?

too much.
keep an eye out on ebay or on maximum-suzuki.com (bandit and katana specific site).
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: TR on January 11, 2005, 04:42:48 PM
I bought an used '93 shock for less than $20, installed it in one hour or so, rode 5000 miles and then drove over a bump and the shock head got lose from the rod and I went boucing the whole way home. For the nature of the failure nothing fell down, so once I reinstalled the old stock shock I managed to reassembly the kat shock, but haven't installed it again.

I wonder if it will fall apart on the bike again... by the way, I never lubed it while installed so I guess it failed due to lack of lubrication or probably due to an inadecuate setup.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 11, 2005, 04:49:53 PM
we have to lube it up when we put it on? where. What kind of lube.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: TR on January 11, 2005, 05:07:46 PM
Just a little grease on the screws and dogbone links, I think...
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 11, 2005, 05:12:16 PM
Is it like the stock shock, where you can adjust it with that tool provided with the bike? Same setup?
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: 96gs on January 11, 2005, 05:21:12 PM
You can adjust preload and rebound.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: TR on January 11, 2005, 05:29:09 PM
The kat shock is alike the stock, except it's 1" longer and has a knob in the upper head to setup rebound, the preload is the same as the stock shock. The spring is stronger, you can tell that simply by sight, so the shock is slightly heavier. The kat shock raises the seat 1 or 2 inches, and if fully preload and the bike is on the centerstand the rear tyre never leaves the ground, which makes easier to put the bike on the centerstand but a little harder to put it off, because your body is higher and I usually had to hang down a foot to push the bike (i'm 5'7"). Don't hesitate, change the shock, it makes handling much better...
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: stefman722 on January 12, 2005, 05:03:46 PM
HOLY guys, i finally got an answer back from the zuki dealer here in winnipeg, and got quote $1326.94 CDN for the rear shock!!!!! that friken crazy! I think ill take my chances on ebay.
Title: Rear Shock Question
Post by: Anonymous on January 13, 2005, 05:34:33 AM
Exactly why I got mine on ebay too.  Dealer wanted $240 for a GS500 shock and $750 for the Katana.  I paid $9.99 plus $12 for shipping for a very nice 2002 Katana 600 shock.

It's a lot stiffer, two-up doesn't bottom out any more.  It will also rattle your teeth when the road gets rough.  The bike stands a little taller now.  I'd guess about 1/2 inch allowing it to lean a bit more with the side stand down.  This is a good thing, before it was TOO straight up when on the sidestand.  I've got it on the middle preload of 5 I think, I'm thinking of setting it down to 2 or 1 because it's almost too stiff.

Ask the seller questions, make sure seller has been doing ebay for a while, and check their feedback.  You should do OK.