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The fork tube holds a motorcycle's front wheel. Most motorcycles have two fork tubes. Fork tubes are the housing for the front suspension for the motorcycle.

Some of the motorcycle's weight is riding on the forks, so inside the tubes there are springs and a fork oil to make the fork tubes act as a shock absorber. There is also pressurized air inside the forks.

Some forks allow the air pressure in the fork to be adjusted through a valve in the top of the fork.

A more common form of adjustment is a screw at the top of the fork which presses down on the fork spring. Turn the screw in increases the pre-load on the spring, stiffening the fork's response. Backing the spring out reduces the pre-load, softening the response.

Some forks also allow damping adjustment. This is typically done through a screw-type adjuster in the top of the fork. The adjuster is connected to a rod that, when rotated, selects differently-sized orifices that control the flow of fork oil. The larger the orifice, the more freely the oil flows, and the less damped is the fork.

Cartridge forks provide better performance by having regressive damping. Cartridges in the forks contain damping orificies that are covered by springs. With small forces on the fork, the springs resist the flow of oil and the damping is higher. With higher forces on the fork the springs are forced back allowing the flow of more oil and less damping. Thus the fork is stiffer when responding to small bumps in the road, but will soften as larger bumps are encountered.

The fork tubes are held together by a part called a triple clamp. There is an upper and a lower triple clamp to stabilize the forks; together these constitute the triple tree. At the bottom of the forks is has a special slot to hold the axle. The front wheel fits between the two forks, the axle harnessing the lower ends of the forks together.

Motorcycle technology

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Fork tube".

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