Re-leaving fork alignment may help, also removing the weight of the bike setting on the folks can cause it to stop. Even stopping riding it will stop the leak (usually not an option).
Neither is usually a fix, generally speaking once it starts to leak it continues until new seals are installed.
Just my 2 cents worth, although anything is possible.
Saw one one time that had quite leaking, because it ran out of oil.
Good luck, Pete.
The forks being inverted will
never ever leak out
all the oil/fluid.
To keep replacing the seals without replacing the bushings is futile in the attempt to stop oil/fluid leaking.
Any time you remove the front wheel,or change the position of the clamped part of the shocks (like rotate) you risk having a leak due to the possibility that the specific alignment of the shock parts have been disturbed and now will wear a new pattern thus allowing for leaks to begin.
I myself have stopped giving in to this foolishness of constant changing of the seals and such and now after a summer of riding and shocks leaking, making a mess that always needs cleaning: find there is no more mess. The shocks leak no more oil/fluid and still work excellently. Screw the oil/fluid - evidently it has only a minimally affect to the shock operation, there's still enough oil/fluid within the shock so it still is very smooth in operation and I see nor feel any degradation of control, nor of operation.
I guess there will be safety nannies now saying how dangerous this is and I'm taking my life in my hands. I ride a motorcycle. Of course I'm taking my life in my hands!
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