maxwell
Active VIP Member
how bad is this sag your speaking of. sleds should have a certain amount of sag.
It was me. I called my dealer and he was reporting it to Cat. So if everyone else reports the problem we should see a fix soon. When is your next trip Newmanater90?Kruchy I believe i was the guy on Chapel lol and yep mine collapsed a few times as well and i have nothing but wear marks on the front shock support from bottoming out every second. One ride and the skid looks a year old already..Looks like a shock change out is the only answer!
any resolutions yet? i need to fix mine before the next trip...it's sagging worse than a 90 year old woman...
buy some fox float fluid
remove rear shock, bleed all air
unscrew air sleeve from end cap, slide sleeve down shock body exposing shaft
clean air chamber of any moisture
good time to stroke the shock, with one end on floor push and collapse rod into body then as it returns to full extension listen for air flowing thru valving, also look to see if rod comes out smooth and at a consistant speed.
If it doesnt you may have a hydraulic side issue, someone that works on shocks could help w/that.
Ok, slide air sleeve up an inch or two,
pour about 2 oz float fluid into air chamber (about a 1/4" deep around shock rod)
lube sleeve threads with float fluid and slide up to cap
screw sleeve back into cap, tighten firmly handtight
reinstall back into skid, dont forget to lube shock bushings
air up!
Problem:
Fine snow/ice working it's way into air seals in sleeve around shock body.
This prevents them from completely sealing the air chamber till shock warms up again. Then when it freezes again same problem. Factory is supposed to put float fluid in there but they always skimp and just mainly do grease. The lube keeps snow/ice from getting into the seals.
This will keep most of the moisture out of your air chamber, I still pull mine apart at the end of the season to wipe out and add float fluid anyway.