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I am reluctant to drill the frame ,will probably shape lug and use a nut on top of it with original bolt.If that doesn't appear too clever will drill larger hole and use a washer to spread the load
The eyelet appears to fit the shape of the seatstay cradle perfectly without any extra packing.
It's the lower eyelet top of strut I mean,seems to fit pretty well.Given the original shock was secured with a m6 bolt,why would it not be sufficient now?
DugB -- Making a u-shaped socket that is a tight fit for the eyelet is not a trivial thing. The socket would have to be made in three pieces and welded together, or it would have to be done on a CNC machine. Maybe you could make the socket a loose fit and line it with a thin piece of rubber.
Yeah, I figured it'd be no small matter. I pretty much assumed I'd take the shock to my local machine shop and have them match the eyelet profile. They're a small outfit but very competent and pretty cheap, too. - Doug :-)
Hmmm, I seem to have been away for a while! This is all looking quite promising. I'm still quite interested in getting something like this for my 857 so if it works, count me in!I think a good shock for this would be the bottom of the range Fox. You can pick it up new from chainreactioncycles for about £150 eBay prices seem to be 50-100 ish for used ones. Personally I'd prefer a fox shock with Pro-pedal to a Risse shock and Fox servicing is much easier to get too.The talk of snapping an M6 bolt makes sense so we'd need something stronger connecting the shock to the swingarm. I have no idea if this is possible but how about "threading" the end of the shock and making the adaptor with a threaded hole/sleeve it slides into? Or just making the adaptor deep enough that it supports the shock?The adaptor would look like a "cup" that maybe 3 centimetres+ of the end of the shock would go into. We could drill through the sides of the "cup" so a bolt could pass through the eyelet making it secure. Failing that we could go back to the idea of drilling through the bottom of the shock eyelet and the adaptor to provide a secure attachement for the M6 bolt.Also, not sure if I ever got an answer to this: Can anyone who's used a rear shock tell me if it's possible to rotate the bottom eyelet of the shock through 90 degrees?Cheers, Stuart.