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Is the consensus on chinese piggy back shocks still the same?
- YamaKawa
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I tried searching for the thoughts on the "probably Chinese made" shocks labeled by all sorts of off brands, but everything was from 3 years ago or (typically) older. I haven't seen any new "reports" since 2017.
Now I know Chinese (assuming they are Chinese made) production quality has increased pretty decently over the last few years, but is the consensus on these Chinese shocks still to "stay away"?
Even those old reports go anywhere from fantastic to terrible....and I do see they are getting "above average" reviews on Amazon...
1985 Yamaha XJ700N Maxim (airhead) - SOLD
1979 Kawasaki KZ400H (LTD), bought with 8416 original miles. - 'Tis my baby
1978 Honda GL1000 - SOLD
1995 Suzuki Katana - SOLD
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- DoctoRot
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- Street Fighter LTD
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- TURBO, Its Better to be Blown than Injected
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He is a IKON shock distributor
His ad is at top left of each page
Very knowledgeable
Dave
Original owner 78 1000 LTD
Mr Turbo Race Kit, MTC 1075 Turbo pistons by PitStop Performance , Falicon Ultra Lite Super Crank, APE everything. Les Holt @ PDM's Billet Goodies . Frame by Chuck Kurzawa @ Logghe Chassis . Deep sump 5qt oil pan. RIP Bill Hahn
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- martin_csr
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I'd say some china parts have gotten worse as they've learned that they can cut corners with no repercussions.
Someone on another forum said his cheap piggyback shocks broke, I believe at the shock mount. Someone here on KZR reported that the Fr brake m/c handlebar mount broke. If these failures happen at speed, there's a good chance a guy could end up dead.
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- Irish Yobbo
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The reason I went for these is that by all accounts they're a decent design and well built, the only issuers being quality control on assembly. So there are places like ChrisLivengood who re-build the shocks. I did a fair bit of research before buying them.
There have been reports of the mounts breaking, which is obviously a big deal. However that appears to be an issue with the cheap clevis mounts, and that could be an issue with using a one-size-fits-all approach which could result in crushing the clevis.. I haven't heard any issues with the eyelet mounts like we need to the KZ bikes.
I opted for 340mm shocks with the 8mm spring for my KZ750 LTD, knowing that would be about 50% stiffer than the stock ones which I would bottom-out on even with the preload set as high as possible. Perhaps the old ones had just worn more, because they feel even stiffer than that. Not harsh, but closer to a sports bike than a sports tourer which I was after.
Quality wise, I bought them with the intention of rebuilding for the quality control issues (they can have air in them which means the travel isn't smoot), but there were none, they were really good out of the box. They have been the single biggest improvement I've made to my bike, since they actually have damping unlike the old worn shocks, and don't just dip the back in and run the bike wide when going into a corner hard.
And after 2 years of mostly being outside, they still look great. The paint on the springs can go a bit dull if left for a while, but a clean and polish and it's back to normal. No signs of any corrosion or leaking.
So I'm happy with mine.
1981 KZ750 LTD
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- YamaKawa
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1985 Yamaha XJ700N Maxim (airhead) - SOLD
1979 Kawasaki KZ400H (LTD), bought with 8416 original miles. - 'Tis my baby
1978 Honda GL1000 - SOLD
1995 Suzuki Katana - SOLD
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- JMKZHI
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- 650ed
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JMKZHI wrote: A photo someone else posted on another forum.
Thank you!!! I had seen that photo before and I searched all over the place looking for it, but I could not find it. I'm really glad you found and posted it! I seriously doubt that a person buying those cheap knock-off shocks would suspect or have any way of discovering that the part that looks like a remote reservoir is just a fake blob of metal. It's amazing to me that so many chinese places produce such bogus junk - have they no ethics whatsoever? It seems obvious to me that shock was produced by at least a small (maybe large) company rather than in someone's basement. So it would take a group of dishonest folks rather than one lone individual to make such a fake shock. It seems to me that anyone buying stuff made in china will end up with worthless junk. Ed
1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- DoctoRot
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- Rick H.
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Rick H.
Rick H.
1977 Kawasaki KZ-1000A1
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- DoctoRot
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I don't understand why people buy the cheapest possible thing and then complain about the quality. Its down right idiotic.
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- Nerdy
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DoctoRot wrote: 40 years ago people were literally saying the same thing about Japan.
Friend, you might want to update that number: 40 years ago was 1980.
60 would probably be about right, if we round up. By the mid-1960s I think people were coming around to the idea that "Japanese quality" meant "good".
1967 Yamaha YCS1 Bonanza
1980 KZ440B
1981 Yamaha XT250H
1981 KZ440 LTD project bike
1981 GPz550
2013 Yamaha FZ6R
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