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Bike starts to "wobble" at higher speeds?

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    #16
    There is really no way around checking all the basics (as has bee n mentioned); you need to make sure it is in order. If I would guess on order of things to check:

    A list
    • axle bolt tightness
    • straight wheels (visual wable less than 0.080")
    • wheel alignment (string method to 5 mm ft off center)
    • tires (new if any doubt)
    • steering tube bearings (regrease and check for notching)
    • swing arm bearings (regrease and check for notching)
    • fork oil (clean replace and measure the level)
    • Check static height and use zip tie to see if bottoming
    if that is ok then
    • rear shocks (progressive or mita??)
    • front springs (progressive)
    At this point you should safely be able to peg an 85mph speedo.

    Everything else is performance mods.
    Last edited by posplayr; 02-17-2010, 11:08 PM.

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      #17
      Could be bad wheel bearings causing the wheel to shimmy around.

      Don't ride it until you figure this out, we want you around for a long time.
      1981 GS650G , all the bike you need
      1980 GS1000G Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely

      Comment


        #18
        All of the above information is good, but it's not all.

        I'll have to ask, what are you considering a "wobble"?
        Do the handlebars start to shake violently or does the bike merely wander back and forth in the lane?
        If it wanders a bit, your steering head bearings might be too tight.
        They could be so tight, they can't easily return to center, where they need to be.

        .
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          #19
          Originally posted by posplayr View Post
          • axle bolt tightness
          • straight wheels (visual wable less than 0.080")
          • wheel alignment (string method to 5 mm ft off center)
          • tires (new if any doubt)
          • steering tube bearings (regrease and check for notching)
          • swing arm bearings (regrease and check for notching)
          • fork oil (clean replace and measure the level)
          • Check static height and use zip tie to see if bottoming
          • rear shocks (progressive or mita??)
          • front springs (progressive)

          At this point you should safely be able to peg an 85mph speedo.


          Done, done and friggin DONE !! with a fresh set of RoadRiders. Still wobbles. Im not talkin 85 tho.... This is definitely 3 digits. I have about 20 miles on the Avons. Took it out on the course. A two mile stretch of I35. Down the ramp and into third onto the highway and the 85 speedo is long past pegged . Into 4th, 7K, into 5th and thats when it starts. Not fun. I have to get off the gas and hold on. I am nowhere near brave enough to loosen my grip as has been suggested. Scary !!


          I know back in the day I was able to roll the throttle on this thing for more than 2 miles and it was rock solid. Not now.........

          Yes Steve. My head bearings may be too tight. Thats what Ill try next.
          Last edited by bonanzadave; 05-15-2010, 11:59 PM.
          82 1100 EZ (red)

          "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by duaneage View Post
            Could be bad wheel bearings
            The guy who put the RoadRiders on said the wheel bearings looked/felt great.

            Originally posted by Steve View Post
            If it wanders a bit, your steering head bearings might be too tight.
            I backed it off about 5 minutes (picture a clock). That helped a lot going slow. I took it out on the freeway and was approaching 6K in 5th when I saw our local Life Link helicopter fly over. I took that as a sign and backed off. It felt better but I think the instability was still there.
            82 1100 EZ (red)

            "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

            Comment


              #21
              Daltydog runs his avons at high 30-40 psi also your bike is not the same as it was 30 years ago . Springs Sag unless you have changed them. one last thing u said the guy that changed your tires said bearings were fine? Did he know u were praticing for the 24 hour speed record.how many miles on the bike ? What suspension modsz/refurb have you done?

              Comment


                #22
                Originally posted by Theo View Post
                Actually, if a tire had 4 digits after the DOT, it would have been produced with in the last decade. All tires before 1999 or 2000 used 3 digit tire codes. So a tire produced the first week of 1978 would be written as 018. But the 8 could mean any decade ending in 8. That's probably why they changed the standard in 2000.
                Except tires didn't have date codes in 1978.
                Check your wheel bearings, too. In all likelihood the swingarm, steering head and wheels all have bad bearings. That stuff is all thirty years old.
                http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v5...tatesMap-1.jpg

                Life is too short to ride an L.

                Comment


                  #23
                  Originally posted by posplayr View Post
                  your bike is not the same as it was 30 years ago .
                  Jim, I think thats it in a nutshell. Im a selfish person to go out and act like some irresponsible kid breaking the law which would put my family in a very bad way if something went wrong. So should I just stop 3 digits ? Easy answer.....or is it ?........

                  Back on topic.....

                  The Guy who did the tires is a speed freak. I wont go into his bio. Its right here http://riverszzr.webs.com/
                  I was surprised he didnt ask about the wheel bearings. 35K on the bike but its a different front wheel. It did the same thing with the orig wheel tho. When I brought it up we looked them over and decided against doing them. He took the tubes out with the old Dunlaps. Cleaned up the rims and put the Avons on tubeless. Note to self: Check the tire pressure again. I forgot to mention: On last nights run I has 15psi in the forks.
                  Mods ? Everything on your list. Progressive frt & rear. All balls head bearings. Swing arm bearings. Fork seals and 10/15 wt fork oil. Every bolt and nut checked. Every adjustment set on 2 (frt fork pre load & dampening, back shock spring height). I would like to revisit the string alignment. I dont think I have that down to a science. When I did it both chain adjuster marks were right on 5 and a half.

                  Side note: I have a friend that was crewing out at Bonneville last summer.

                  Originally posted by tkent02 View Post
                  In all likelihood the wheels all have bad bearings. That stuff is all thirty years old.
                  Tom, I will get new wheel bearings....

                  What do you think about the saddle bags causing speed issues ?

                  Last edited by bonanzadave; 05-17-2010, 12:51 PM.
                  82 1100 EZ (red)

                  "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Originally posted by bonanzadave View Post

                    [/SIZE][/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR]

                    Tom, I will get new wheel bearings....

                    What do you think about the saddle bags causing speed issues ?

                    I would say not likely with a tight bike but possible, aerodynamics is weird science.
                    I put a small tank bag on my BMW with a big fairing and got helmet buffeting. I don't know how a bag on a tank behind a big fairing can cause buffeting, but it did. Weird science.

                    More likely worn bearings are allowing the problem, and the bags trigger it.
                    Check all the bearings, even without that trigger, something else might do it.
                    Rain grooves got my old Yamaha 650 going once.
                    Speed wobble crashes are bad ones.
                    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v5...tatesMap-1.jpg

                    Life is too short to ride an L.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Originally posted by bonanzadave View Post
                      Jim, I think thats it in a nutshell. Im a selfish person to go out and act like some irresponsible kid breaking the law which would put my family in a very bad way if something went wrong. So should I just stop 3 digits ? Easy answer.....or is it ?........

                      Back on topic.....

                      The Guy who did the tires is a speed freak. I wont go into his bio. Its right here http://riverszzr.webs.com/
                      I was surprised he didnt ask about the wheel bearings. 35K on the bike but its a different front wheel. It did the same thing with the orig wheel tho. When I brought it up we looked them over and decided against doing them. He took the tubes out with the old Dunlaps. Cleaned up the rims and put the Avons on tubeless. Note to self: Check the tire pressure again. I forgot to mention: On last nights run I has 15psi in the forks.
                      Mods ? Everything on your list. Progressive frt & rear. All balls head bearings. Swing arm bearings. Fork seals and 10/15 wt fork oil. Every bolt and nut checked. Every adjustment set on 2 (frt fork pre load & dampening, back shock spring height). I would like to revisit the string alignment. I dont think I have that down to a science. When I did it both chain adjuster marks were right on 5 and a half.

                      Side note: I have a friend that was crewing out at Bonneville last summer.



                      Tom, I will get new wheel bearings....

                      What do you think about the saddle bags causing speed issues ?
                      As far as triple digit testing...... Ya gotta do some testing just to insure the bike is safe. Just don’t make it too much of a habit

                      Sounds like you have been through most things. The alignment might be out a bit using swing arm marks. The string method is relatively simple. You are just extending strings froward from the rear wheel that are both parallel to the rear wheel (either side).

                      In this way the front wheel should be both aligned and right in the center of the two strings that are projected forward. In order to determine if it is centered and aligned though you need four equal measurements both front and back of rotor and left and right side rotors. That is so that you get the front forks straight and centered.

                      You have not really described the wobble. Is it from the front or the rear? Is it handlebar shake (like a tank slapper) or rear end "wobble".

                      If the tank bags were sticking pretty far out into the free stream velocity, then they could start developing what is known as a "vortex street"

                      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%A1rm%C3%A1n_vortex_street

                      When you have a "bluff body" (a rounded shape like a saddle bag), then there is a tendency for the flow to alternating shed from one side to the other. When the shedding occurs there is a increased pressure drag associated with the low pressure in the separated flow area. The alternating side to side drags, coupling with rear wheel side wall flex could be causing the issue.

                      I have noticed a lot of lateral dynamics on my ED, in curves from having a tall 130/90-17 tire coupled with slightly soft rear springs.

                      Any how without getting into a whole lot more conjecture I would not change anything else and just take off the bad and see it reduces the effect.

                      You can always come back and do the wheel alignment, but doing one thing at a time helps narrow down teh different factors.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Originally posted by posplayr View Post

                        You have not really described the wobble. Is it from the front or the rear?
                        Dont know front or rear. Its as if the thing were on a hinge. Not head shake. A kind of come on slow weave.....
                        82 1100 EZ (red)

                        "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Originally posted by bonanzadave View Post
                          Dont know front or rear. Its as if the thing were on a hinge. Not head shake. A kind of come on slow weave.....
                          Sounds like the rear then ; dont change anything but drop those bags and see if it helps

                          Comment


                            #28
                            We talking about these bags?



                            The main issues I had with rear wobble was too much weight and being in a undulating turn. Doesn't sound like what you are describing.

                            Are you carrying any weights in there ?

                            Comment


                              #29
                              Originally posted by posplayr View Post
                              We talking about these bags?
                              Yep ! and now I got a gay-rod sissy bar and a bowling bag on the back. Dont really carry any weight except for a small tool kit and a rain suit. I got the bags so I can ride the bike if the wife sends me out for grocery's .

                              Last edited by bonanzadave; 05-17-2010, 10:49 PM.
                              82 1100 EZ (red)

                              "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Last night I stretched a string to check wheel alignment. Around the back tire and up to the front. I spread the string apart up front so when it passed the forward sides of the rear tire it just touched but did not deflect. I then measured the gap between the string and the front tire. Both sides forward and both sides aft were the same gap. Does that sound close ?

                                Checked the tire pressure. 35psi in both. The 15psi I put in the forks is still there too even with a pitted fork tube. Took the Saddle bags off but left the tail pack on. Went for a "run". It felt pretty good on one pass. When it started to buffet a bit I tucked in and the buffet went away so I rolled in some more gas. I got going so fast I blew right by my exit. Coming back It started to "dance" a little at 5K so I backed off and went home. Funny thing on that last pass I had my feet on the back pegs......
                                82 1100 EZ (red)

                                "You co-opting words of KV only thickens the scent of your BS. A thief and a putter-on of airs most foul. " JEEPRUSTY

                                Comment

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