your bike is laminated?That's exactly what I do. I find that it is the accuracy of the veneer that's stops the wobble
your bike is laminated?That's exactly what I do. I find that it is the accuracy of the veneer that's stops the wobble
Of course..! It's the way ahead lolyour bike is laminated?
The MT always gives me the wood lol.He loves a bit of wood to play with.
Are you sure that works? I had mine laser aligned to try and cure it, I have just rechecked it with a straight edge and its totally straight. However, using vernier calipers with method you describe, there is a difference between both sides of nearly 2mm (I am however using the standard Yamaha soft alloy adjusters, which have deformed slightly). I think the straight edge or laser alignment is the only correct way to measureI also had speed wobbles that started about 170Kph but now it's fixed.
There is a design concern with the chain adjuster which is parallax error as the swing arm mark sits 10mm above the adjusting block. If your not square with the marks then you can end up with a substantial error. Before I made my first adjustment using the vernier, I found that I had a 1.5mm difference between the two adjustment blocks
I now use a vernier calliper to accurately measure the distance between the machined locknut web and the adjusting block. I then firmly tighten the axel nut and recheck the adjusting block measurements on both sides, check chain tension again, then torque the axle nut using a torque wrench set at 150Nm to do the job correctly.
This seems to have fixed my problem, best of luck with yours.
Adds comfort and reduces the chances of Urethral stricture - that's a win win as far as I'm concernedLove the sheepskin rug on the seat !
Dude check out the bit I've highlighted hereNot at the back wheel nut mate- straight from the horses mouth- the Technician at the dealer I bought it from - don't imagine 4 Newton metres would make a real noticeable difference at that setting tbh.
I reckon I was a fair bit off (ie well under)
Classic Street Tracker project underway for winter......
can't read that but my manual says 108ft/lb which is near enough 146Nm
the nerdy bit... 1 Nm = 0.73756 ft/lb
Haha Blue Touchpaper well and truly lit by Fly de Boi (he with the large stirry spoon!)Torquegate .