This is kinda involved, so I hope you'll bear with me.
I just read Draketrumpets "Why do I wobble like a weeble?" from top to bottom, and there's a lot of good advice. But I'm wondering if there's more to my problem.
First, this is an '80G and I run a Windjammer fairing and stock bags. The bike has 49K on it, and at some point, the front end was swapped out. It has the air shocks on it, and it came off a bike w/o a fairing, because the headlight brackets are still attached to the tubes. It also has a fork brace, that looks to be good quality.
My first question is; could this have been on a bike with a single disc front end? The brakes don't have near as much stopping power as I would expect from dual discs, and I'm thinking maybe it has the wrong MC for this application? Is there a way to identify the right/wrong MC?
The big problem is similar to Drake's. Cornering over 40mph causes a over/under steering problem. When you try to take a line, the bike wants to fall farther into it than you want, and you have to straighten it out to correct it, but it wobbles and you can't find a happy medium. You wind up leaning in, then up, then back in, and over 60 it gets a bit too interesting. Switching lanes on the highway can bring on the start of a wobble that definitely get your attention.
The Clymers calls for a max. pressure of 30 lbs. in the front tire, I believe, and I've been running 28. The neck bearings have no notches or rough spots when you rotate it w/o the wheel on it. It has a 'sweet spot' from center to left and right of a couple inches, where it moves more easily than turning to the stops. There's no front-to-back play when you grab the forks and move them. The tire is an older Dunlop, but it's not cupped, tho it could stand replacing. The rear tire ditto. If anything, the steering head feels a bit too tight. The really weird thing is, it seems to get tighter after you've been riding for 50-60 miles.Just trying to move the bars back and forth takes some effort.
One of my riding partners has been a professional Harley wrench for many years, and is very knowledgeable. He thinks it's the tire, or maybe the wheel bearings. He says the neck bearings have that feel because of the bike tracking in that spot for so many years, and it's not the problem.
I've changed the fork oil, adjusted the fork pressure to 15 lbs., checked over all the nuts and bolts. The neck bearings don't seem to be bogus, other than the sweet spot. My next move would be a tire up front, and probably the rear, because I know that can affect handling. If that doesn't cure it, the only other thing I can think of is aligning the wheels. The front rim looks undamaged, and appears true, but until I put it on a stand, I won't know.
All of that said, anything that stands out as something particular to this bike, or the set-up I'm using? Could the weight of the fairing require stiffer springs?
It's gotten to where it's no fun,and a little scary riding this puppy.
Thanks.
I just read Draketrumpets "Why do I wobble like a weeble?" from top to bottom, and there's a lot of good advice. But I'm wondering if there's more to my problem.
First, this is an '80G and I run a Windjammer fairing and stock bags. The bike has 49K on it, and at some point, the front end was swapped out. It has the air shocks on it, and it came off a bike w/o a fairing, because the headlight brackets are still attached to the tubes. It also has a fork brace, that looks to be good quality.
My first question is; could this have been on a bike with a single disc front end? The brakes don't have near as much stopping power as I would expect from dual discs, and I'm thinking maybe it has the wrong MC for this application? Is there a way to identify the right/wrong MC?
The big problem is similar to Drake's. Cornering over 40mph causes a over/under steering problem. When you try to take a line, the bike wants to fall farther into it than you want, and you have to straighten it out to correct it, but it wobbles and you can't find a happy medium. You wind up leaning in, then up, then back in, and over 60 it gets a bit too interesting. Switching lanes on the highway can bring on the start of a wobble that definitely get your attention.
The Clymers calls for a max. pressure of 30 lbs. in the front tire, I believe, and I've been running 28. The neck bearings have no notches or rough spots when you rotate it w/o the wheel on it. It has a 'sweet spot' from center to left and right of a couple inches, where it moves more easily than turning to the stops. There's no front-to-back play when you grab the forks and move them. The tire is an older Dunlop, but it's not cupped, tho it could stand replacing. The rear tire ditto. If anything, the steering head feels a bit too tight. The really weird thing is, it seems to get tighter after you've been riding for 50-60 miles.Just trying to move the bars back and forth takes some effort.
One of my riding partners has been a professional Harley wrench for many years, and is very knowledgeable. He thinks it's the tire, or maybe the wheel bearings. He says the neck bearings have that feel because of the bike tracking in that spot for so many years, and it's not the problem.
I've changed the fork oil, adjusted the fork pressure to 15 lbs., checked over all the nuts and bolts. The neck bearings don't seem to be bogus, other than the sweet spot. My next move would be a tire up front, and probably the rear, because I know that can affect handling. If that doesn't cure it, the only other thing I can think of is aligning the wheels. The front rim looks undamaged, and appears true, but until I put it on a stand, I won't know.
All of that said, anything that stands out as something particular to this bike, or the set-up I'm using? Could the weight of the fairing require stiffer springs?
It's gotten to where it's no fun,and a little scary riding this puppy.
Thanks.
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