Motorcycle Suspension Tuning Guide

By Mountain Race Shop · May 2026 · 8 min read

Suspension tuning is about controlling how your bike reacts to forces. At its core, you are managing three things: spring force, damping force, and geometry.

The Three Fundamentals

Spring Force

Supports the weight of the bike and rider. Determines ride height, sag, and how the suspension responds to forces. Get the spring rate right first — everything else depends on it.

Damping Force

Controls how quickly suspension moves. Created by oil flowing through valves and shim stacks. Without damping, the suspension would oscillate uncontrolled after every bump.

Geometry

Head angle, trail, swingarm length, linkage ratio. These determine how forces are distributed between front and rear — and how the bike handles at different speeds.

The Three Main Problems

Most suspension issues fall into one of three categories:

Too Harsh

Suspension resists movement instead of absorbing terrain. Small bumps transmit directly to the rider. Common in forks with stiff initial shim stacks or excessive oil height.

Read: Fork Harsh on Small Bumps →

Too Soft / Packing

Suspension can't recover between impacts. The bike sinks into the stroke and traction drops. Usually caused by slow rebound damping.

Read: Shock Packing Down →

Poor Control

Suspension feels disconnected or unpredictable. Different parts of the stroke behave differently. Often a compression/rebound imbalance.

Read: HSC vs LSC Explained →

Understanding Damping

Damping controls how quickly the suspension moves. It is created by:

Oil flow through valves and shim stacks. When the suspension compresses or extends, oil is forced through ports in the damping piston. Shim stacks covering these ports resist the flow — the more resistance, the more damping force is produced.

The damping force depends on:

This relationship between shaft velocity and damping force is described by the force-velocity curve — the most important tool in suspension tuning.

Common Issues and Fixes

The Modern Approach

Old Method

  • Guess a shim stack change
  • Disassemble, rebuild, reassemble
  • Test ride
  • Repeat (hope for the best)

Modern Method

  • Model the current stack digitally
  • See the force-velocity curve
  • Predict the effect of changes
  • Simulate on track data
  • Build with confidence

The old method works — eventually. But it costs time, money, and a lot of unnecessary rides on bad suspension. The modern approach uses data to shortcut the process: model, predict, refine, then build once.

Tools That Change Everything

The Shim Calculator allows you to:

Start Tuning With Data

Enter your shim stacks and see force-velocity curves. Get recommended stacks calibrated to your rider weight, spring rate, and discipline.

Use the Shim Calculator

Go Deeper

The complete methodology is explained in the Suspension Engineer's Handbook — covering shim stack physics, force-velocity theory, tuning workflows, and real-world case studies. Available on the Mountain Race Shop website.

Get the Handbook

The complete suspension tuning methodology — from theory to workshop practice. A$69.95 PDF download.

Buy Now — PDF Download   Learn More

Deep-Dive Articles

Fork Harsh on Small Bumps

Causes and fixes for small bump harshness — what's really going on in the early stroke.

Shock Packing Down

Why the shock can't recover between bumps and how rebound shim stack design fixes it.

HSC vs LSC Explained

High-speed and low-speed compression refer to shaft velocity, not bike speed. Here's what that means.

How to Build a Shim Stack

Stack structure, key principles, and the cube relationship between thickness and stiffness.

Beginner's Revalving Guide

Complete guide to motorcycle suspension revalving — tools, process, and common mistakes.

Compare Suspension Tools

ShimCalculator vs ReStackor vs Motoklik — feature-by-feature comparison.