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I've just bought a used bike on eBay, its a 2002 Marin Bobcat Trail. It has 'In-Sync 266' suspension forks. This is my first suspension bike so I need some guidance in the use and maintenance of these forks. I can't find any user manuals or anything online. Perhaps someone has one they could send me? Failing that, here are the questions.

  1. The fork feels very soft to me, but I am a heavy rider and I'm not used to suspension forks. How do I know if the fork is working 'right'?

  2. What maintenance can/should I carry out on the fork?

  3. On the left hand side (only) there is an adjustment knob labelled just + and -. What does this do and how do I know how to adjust it? Why is it only on one side?

That should be enough to be going on with, any answers very much appreciated.

For guidance, my last bike was a 1995 Marin Bear Valley SE, hardtail, no suspension. AWESOME bike that served me well for over 17 years, until it was stolen a few months ago. I did all my own maintenance and I consider myself a competent cycle mechanic, its just that my skills are relevant to 17-year-old bikes :)

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    From a StackExchange point of view, this is a very canonical question! +1 Aug 3, 2012 at 16:26
  • <a href="thegoldenwrench.blogspot.com/2012/04/… folks</a> might be able to advise you. Nothing ventured, nothing gained... Aug 6, 2012 at 0:52
  • There is an interesting question in the original posting that has not been answered in the thread: The question is, why is there a pre-load knob only on one side. Particularly for coil suspoension forks having only one knob seems to imply that you are pre-loading only one of the two coils in the fork, while the other spring would remain unchanged. 1) Is this assumption (that only one of the two coils gets pre-loaded) correct? 2) Why is it done like this? (Would this be done to have the "sag distance" still be covered by the other coil?) 3) Doesn't pre-loading only one of the two coils cause an
    – Nicklas
    Apr 23, 2015 at 22:06
  • @Nicklas There is only one preload knob, because there is only a spring, whether air or coil, on one side of the fork. The other side is the oil based damping system.
    – zenbike
    Apr 24, 2015 at 2:25

1 Answer 1

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  1. The fork is "right" if it has the right "sag", that is, if it lowers a bit when you get on the bike. The right sag is no less than 10%, no more than 25% of total travel, for a regular bike (non-downhill, non-special-purpose);
  2. Basically three "areas" must be addressed on maintenance:
    1. Cleaning the inside, for removal of old oil/grease, water, mud, grime, rust, etc.
    2. Caring for the damping elements, which could be elastomer, coil, air chamber, open oil bath, etc. That would vary a lot depending on the type;
    3. Lubing the telescopic parts, which are responsible for the movement of the fork. Depending on the type (open oil bath, for example) the damping oil and the stanchion-lubing oil is the same, so it is serviced together.
  3. This is called "preload", and probably increases or decreases the compression of a coil spring or elastomer. That is for the adjustment of "sag" according to your weight, being equivalent to say that it lets the fork "harder" or "softer".

As far as I know, the brand of your fork is on the cheap end of the quality spectrum, so it's possible that it doesn't work perfectly, or at least not as perfectly as higher-end models. I'd say that, if it "works", meaning if it saves your body (hands mostly) from shaking over bumps, then keep it, even if it has too much sag, or some play, or is not so light. But if it "gives up" working too soon (say, you go over bumps and it barely moves, or you feel the bumps hard on your hands), than it is well worth to change it for a better model.

If you decide you'll keep it and service it yourself, I'd recommend purchasing some grease/oil (check which you'll need for your specific model) that's made specifically for bike suspension. A lot of lubricants I've inadvertedly used in the past contained some sort of adhesive (to stick to the metal surfaces and protect them), and the lubrication became gluey as soon as the bike hit some dusty path. On the other hand, fluids intended for suspensions or hydraulic systems tend to expel impurities and keep flowing nice over time.

EDIT: I've found some photos and reviews online, of your fork (search words: "sync 266 fork"). By that (plastic upper caps, dust "accordions" around the telescopes) and by the reviews description (mtbr.com), I'd say it is a low-end fork, thus without any hydraulic valves inside, most probably elastomer or coil spring. You should be able to disassemble it at home "no-fear".

Hope this helps!

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  • Thanks, that helps somewhat, so +1. However, an important piece of my question is that this is a circa 2002 model and I can't find any documentation for the forks. So anything suffixed by "check the requirements for your model" are not all that helpful, since THAT is the information I'm really looking for. How do I tell what type of forks they are? I wound up the adjustment knob to pretty much the maximum setting and the forks did become firmer, to the point where they are probably OK for my weight (I'm pretty heavy).
    – Tim Long
    Aug 4, 2012 at 23:16
  • A good alternative is to use the fork while it feels and looks ok, and when it needs some of the pointed maintenance, take it apart yourself, or at a shop, that way you can discover what's inside without too much danger. But I agree that I didn't provide that information you asked. Aug 5, 2012 at 14:07
  • @TimLong updated the answer, hope this helps Aug 5, 2012 at 14:12

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