im also going to try to put the stock transfer rods back on and see if i got a short pair of after market transfer rods.
Also what u say about the front might be it because i once heard that the proaction suspension (full coupling suspension) performs best when parallel to the tunnel. mine is dead nuts parallel to the tunnel.
these are some quotes from tom hartmans website
YAMAHA Pro-Action Rear Suspension
After years of dealing with the Yamaha Pro-Action system (a true parallelogram suspension with two way coupling) we have found it to be very finicky, and that an incorrectly adjusted suspension will cause a terrible ride (ratcheting, binding or bottoming) and possible suspension damage. One of our main concerns and the number one problem is an incorrectly set up suspension that when compressed the stroke or rearward travel of the slide frame exceeds the inner diameter of the track binding the suspension, and eventually something has to give. This will cause damage ranging from broken drive axles, bent tunnel or shock mounts, to bent track adjusters. All these form an improperly adjusted suspension. It is CRITICAL that you adjust the suspension AND track to factory specifications. Here are some we use for our Mountain Max 700's. The front limiting strap adjustment 25-30mm.The factory maximum is 35mm (pulled up) and minimum 10mm (let out). This is measured from the tip of the adjustment bolt to the plate the bolt goes through. The upper gap in the control rod 10mm. The factory maximum is10mm and minimum 7mm. Again we can't stress enough the fact that you should be using the factory track and suspension limit specifications for your model suspension.
These are excerpts from an article that was published by Snow Tech winter 1997-98 issue. They can be contacted at (320) 763-5411 or (Editor@RaceRally.com) we highly recommend a subscription to the magazine.
Angle of Incidence
This is where the parallelogram concept came into being, which all coupled vehicles are a variation. (Parallelogram meaning that if you have equal length arms and equal length bars the link has to stay parallel at all times.) By limiting the movement of the rear arm, both arms would move "together" as a parallelogram, even though only one of the arms actually encountered the bump. The end result is that the suspension rails remain fairly parallel to the chassis.
So this leads me to believe that my skis are to soft and maby i need the 1" bracket's for the front shocks