Most shocks and forks come with lots of instructions about setting sag depending on your weight and terrain, but it can all get a bit confusing, you can just set it so it feels right, not too soft, not too hard, check the travel, how is the rebound, you dont want it feeling 'dead' but you dont want it so springy it throws you off after a landling. Clearly if you are only going to the shops you dont need it super soft to soak up big bumps, but then again, if you are on a fast DH run you want it as smooth as poss.
I found my forks a bit hard on my arms after last summers 1st trip to Alps, so I adjusted my front forks a lot, put in soft springs, etc and on my second trip I was very pleased, my arms/hands felt a lot better (also bigger grips helped), the forks were prob too soft for someone who would be doing huge drops and jumps, but I wasnt't so felt just right.
I had a big hit two summers ago, is it the one with 24" rear wheel ?
Andy
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