ReX
TY 4 Stroke God
§tylus said:Question: since the Vector ER is changing over to the monoshock suspension how is it in the bumps and cornering. I love being able to tune the current rear Vector suspension for the perfect balance between ski pressure and cornering ability. Once set correctly the sled just pivots around any corner. Do you lose some of that with the monoshock? How does it compare?
They are very close, but I'd say if you're into set it and forget it the Vector has some advantages. Also having the ability to dial in the weight distribution on the skis with spring pre-loads is very usefull.
The mono-shock is a very good suspension though. I like having the ability to stiffen it up if I get on an aggressive trail and I'm "in the mood to work the sled hard" as well as being able to soften it right up for cruising over stutter bumps.
In some conditions the Vector is a little nicer IMO. We were riding on a trail with lots of stutter bumps that went up and over all sorts of rises (that were begging for air time). The Vector in our group had a soft enough suspension to be decent on the stutters, but enough bottoming resistance to handle the rises. On my RX I tried a few settings, but nothing was ideal. Softer got rid of the stutters, but bottomed out a lot on the rises and stiffer beat me up, but handled the rises.
The other thing I find with the mono-shock is it's hard to adjust ski pressure and control ski lift. Again the ideal compromize is compromized. Set it up for weight transfer and hookup is awesome (far better than the Vector), but it's more tippy and no steering under throttle. Tighten the limiter a couple of holes and set the weight transfer at minimum and handling is very good, you can steer under throttle, but hookup is down. I've tried to find the right compromize, but it seems to "rock" back, lifting the skis too easily with anything except with weight transfer almost non-existant (the sled is still fast, just won't win at the drag races - this is how I have mine setup).
They are both good suspensions (far better than older suspensions). I think the biggest advantage to the mono-shock is it is lighter (and probably cheaper for Yamaha to manufacture).