4.3 sounds too high; somewhere between 2.0 and 4.0 is more like it. (I think mine is around 2.5-2.75, but don't quote me, I didn't have my googles on at the time.)
Try this, slightly alternate method... warm the bike up to temp' and then set the green pot' to 1.0... then blip the throttle, to check for hesitancy, and add a bit (0.25 - 0.33) until it starts to hesitate... then back it off gradualy until there's no hesitancy. It's like setting the pilot/primary jets on a carby... find the point it goes too rich and then back off from it.
Or what they say:
"
Green Fuel Pot: (functions like a fuel mixture screw on a carburetor)
Adjusts for the motorcycle's fuel requirements during light load operation, from idle through legal highway cruising speeds and steady throttle, at or below the rpm set by your rpm set pot. We have found that manufacturers have generally leaned out the fuel mixtures for emissions to a specific rpm (see below). To set this pot, make sure the motorcycle is up to a full operating temperature, then while in neutral, pick a fast idle that is not easy to hold a steady rpm (V-twins 1800-2200 rpm and multiple cylinders 2500-3000 rpm), hold the throttle at that spot and then slowly and evenly turn the green pot clockwise from its minimum setting, while listening to the exhaust sound. You should hear the exhaust sound change form an irregular and uneven sound to an even and smooth one. You may also see an increase in rpm as you increase fuel, and if you continue to increase fuel past this point to where the revs start to fall back away, then you can stop and start returning the pot screw back to a point half way between where the exhaust note first smoothed out and the point where the highest rpm starts to fall away.
"
Front springs are Hyperpro, they bloke that sold them to me is one of the men behind YSS, he also sold me a Wilbers rear shock... from speaking to him, I get the distinct impression that all those brands are made on the same plant and the differences are only cosmetic and for branding. All that aside... the ride result is brilliant! I now get front travel without jarring and there's practically no dive. I was running OEM springs with almost full pre-load, now with the progressives there is almost no pre-load and the travel is smooth without jarring. The OEM springs are dual rate, if you're over 100kg and have a lot of pre-load you get to the second spring rate very quickly on our rough B & C roads (some of our A roads aren't flat either). Money well spent and it's no more difficult than changing the fork oil.
Edited by AzzA, 29 October 2012 - 11:47 pm.