Quote:
Originally Posted by Timee80
a lower volume of oil will obviously change temperature according to its environment alot quicker than a larger volume of oil. Think of warming a babys bottle of milk up in a jug of hot water. A thinner bottle will warm milk up much quicker (is it convection that im trying to explain  )
I know what i mean anyway
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kaylon
I think he means that big bores work more consistency over a larger temperature range compared to normal shocks due to a larger volume of oil...
Like water in the sun..small amount will evaporate quicker then a large amount.. I think.
Granted that's all far to technical for me...I simply put shocks on, drop car from 3 feet and see what happens...Big bores don't bottom out as much, job done...
J
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Now that might be true if we were talking about quick heating/cooling of shocks here (like a baby bottle in a pan), but we're not. Even with our poor weather the temperature changes slowly.....
They are better for other reasons that even I do not understand all off/or fully. But I know some.
G