
Before I bought the shock I did a bunch of research. In the ad the seller listed some information—and yes he will ship to international destinations.
I found this online.purpleapplesales wrote:You are bidding on a compression and rebound adjustable Ohlins shock absorber.
28 adjustment clicks on rebound, 22 clicks on compression.
Brand new never used.
Spherical bearing end mounts with 295mm eye to eye length, 22mm mounting width, 10mm ID mounting holes.
Spring OD 64mm. Comes with 195 lb/in spring. Others available for additional cost.
Piggyback reservoir is mounted at 30° angle from back.
Usable shock travel 73mm

I also looked up the stock Derbi shock and the info I found initially was only partially correct. It listed the eye holes to be 10mm ID, the same as this shock. It also listed the length to be 285mm. I think this was in error. I've found many different sources since then that list it in a range from 270 to 290. Once I had the stock shock off I measured it as around 280mm. This shock is 295mm and that is a bit long. While I was unable to find information for the 50cc shock I was able to find this document on the 125cc shock.

Here are the two shocks side by side.

Another difference is the spacing of the eyelets. On the Ohlins they are 26.5mm, and on the Ollie they are 29.5mm. I was able to compensate for his disparity with two washer per end.

I took several photos of the Derbi to see if this shock might fit. It was clear that it couldn't fit in a conventional manor, although it might fit if mounted upside down. I checked around and found that it is okay to run these upside down--the main drawback is getting dirt in the system, and the way to deal with that is with an MX shock cover (I'm going to have to pick up one of those).





It appeared that there was enough of a possibility that it would work that it was worth the chance and I ordered the shock. In my initial attempt to place it I found that even inverted it wasn't going to work.




For this to work there would need to be some modifications employed. The first of which was triming down the adjustment knob on the shock, and I would have to shave off some of the bottom area of the shock as well. Additionally I found that I would have to make modifications to both the swing arm and frame in order to provide enough clearance.

With the mods I was able to finally get the shock fitted into the bike.







The next issue was spring strength. The spring that comes with the shock is stamped as a 00281-23/35 L384. From much reseach I finally found this document on Ohlins' web site that described the employment of this spring on another Ohlins shock (one for a CRF50). From this chart and employed on the Honda this spring was rated for a rider of around 140lbs. Now the ad for the shock had stated that it came with a spring rated at 195 lbs/in--which this document and the spring list as 35 N/mm. I found another spring listed on teh ebay marked as 0281-13/60 L384 which would be 60 N/mm or as the document reads 198 plus rider's weight. I order one, but I didn't want to wait that long before I rode the bike. So I harvested a spring from an earlier (2000) GPR75. This proved quite difficult to remove, although with perseverance I finally found it free and employed it on the Ohlins.








The shock is now fitted, and I've been riding the bike. I'm going to have to follow this up with a second post with more photos, and the results of the test rides—keep tuned in...