Pigford wrote:....but I suppose in reality, it won't make the slightest difference either way

To be fair guys, I posted this issue on a couple of forums, and got this response from my VFR friends
Alan wrote:What does the manual say? Or are these after market replacements for original linear springs? In which case what do the fitting instructions say?
The argument that having the tighter coils at the top will reduce the unsprung weight sounds right but I'd be surprised if you can actually notice the difference in the real world. Something that you're more likely to notice though is messing up the air gap. Because the oil level is usually set without the springs in it relies on the the springs displacing a certain amount of oil to give a certain air gap. The oil level is therefore specified for the springs being in a particular way up and I suspect a messed up air gap will be more noticeable than a couple of ounces of extra unsprung weight.
The VFR has progressive* springs fitted as standard. The 750 and 800 have the tighter coils down but the VTEC has the tighter coils up according to the service manuals. So it obviously depends on how they're designed to go and that's probably connected to oil level
* Strictly two-rate linear but one end is wound tighter than the other.
I think that this is the best point , as they are aftermarket springs and the fitting instructions are fairly vague and don't specify fitment .
tricky wrote: i wish there was some company that made linear springs for these old bikes, suited to you body weight, as i think these progressive things, are all made at the same place, somewhere in tingtong land, and packeged up for different brands.
as there is no indicated spring rate they must be a compromise/ or wrong all together.
Fair point though Tricky........