"Because it's in our DNA to DIY" I had an old pair of RedWing shocks that were originally made for something like a CB750. They had heaps of compression & rebound damping, I suspected that they were not responding rapidly enough for MX duty. So I stripped them down, I liked the build on them, rebuildable, big tough rods, steel piston rings.
Anyway I removed a couple of shims, tried them...Hmmm still too slow in damping, particularly the compression, stripped them again & bored out the compression galleries, then the rebound galleries( slightly smaller).
Tried them...Hmmm better, lets see now, I'll drill those suckers out as big as possible, try it out...Uh oh! not enough damping. Re-strip, add more shims again, try it out...Yeah getting there. But still very harsh on the topout, probably had something to do with me cutting the topout springs shorter to gain a little more travel.
So I thinks to my self "you know ya should really buy a set that are professionally sorted", so I did, a set of Falcons.
The Falcons have been good, no temperature build up like the old shocks, nice soft transition at topout, they probably are due for a checkover after a couple of seasons racing. What always amazes me is the amount of fine crud that always gets into both the forks & rear shocks over time.
The experience I gained from the RedWing experiments, made me much more aware of the inner goings on of hydraulic damping & what makes for a good shock.
The next time I go shock shopping I'll definately try a set of YSS as when the marketing for these started I read into the description all the primary things that make for a good shock are there. I will be interested to see how they compare to the Falcons.
I'm kinda with Lozza on this one, leave it to the professionals.