I recently had new Michelin Commanders fitted to my 2004 Road King. I notice that the new tyres have a somewhat more rounded profile than the old Metzeler Marathons had; I suspect the Metzelers had done a few miles. The current tyres have now done approx 300km
Anyways, what I have noticed most is that when getting up to speeds over 100km/h the bike seems a little skittish & when you really hammer it at around 140km/h I get a little bit of a weave now and again. Nothing too dramatic, just a bit annoying & everso mildly unnerving.
On the plus side, the bike does tip into corners a little more easily than it used to on the old rubber.
Is this just because of the more rounded profile on the new tyres & it will likely settle in a bit more as they wear down or, is it possible that someone screwed up the alignment or something when the wheels went back on??
Just curious as the bike has gone from extremely stable at speed to a little nervous at speed & I'm not sure I like the feeling all that much.
Thanks in advance for any comment or advice
Did you replace with the same aspect tyre, eg 65 or 60?
She's done 85,000km of which I've done about 7000km since I purchased her.
I have no idea what fork mods may have been done; I suspect none since the rear shocks are standard OEM.
She is due a service in about 1000km, what weight fork oil would you recommend trying?
Running 38 - 40Psi in the rear & 36-38Psi in the front; I intend to experiment a little within that range (it was what the tyre fitter & michelin recommend).
I know the Metzelers ran stupid high pressures but, I don't believe these do.
Also playing around with rear shock air pressures; I reset it to 5Psi the other day; may yet try it with zero. I weigh 100kegs.....
Sounds like the bike shop are actually doing the right thing .
Today the bike was in at the workshop for a service, replacement front motor mount & a search for any other loose bits that might be causing problems.. A few things were discovered & fixed as follows: Front Wheel - spacers were installed on the wrong sides which was causing my front brakes to bind. I assume it probably screwed with the alignment of the front wheel in relation to the rear? If this is the case, I assume that this probably wasn't helping my handling exactly? Don't know when this occurred, could have been when the new front tyre was fitted & the wheel refitted to the bike I guess? Front Motor Mount - well & truly stuffed, huge split in it, replaced with a new one. Again, I presume this probably wasn't helping. Swing Arm bracket - Mechanic discovered that lower bolt on the RHS bracket was loose. I presume this might have been permitting some sideways movement in the swing arm mount. Not enough to cause major, major issues but, perhaps just enough to upset the handling a bit. So, upshot was I took the bike for a short blast after picking it up & first impression is that it is in fact handling better. Too early to say it's all sorted but, hoping to get out for a longer blast tomorrow & back up onto the tablelands & range road where I really have noticed the edginess in the handling. Fingers crossed, now all sorted... I am contemplating some kind of brace for the back end but, the price is a little scary & I have been spending waaaaaay to much sorting out little problems on this bike... kinda over spending money right now " border="0" src="/DesktopModules/NTForums/themes/_default/emoticons/smile.gif" />
Hi Outcast,
Just a thought regarding the rear shocks, I was talking to a bloke who took off his OEM rear airshocks and fitted OEM progressive spring shocks and said he had cut his hard cornering wobbles down and had improved his handling immensely, I would think getting some aftermarket good quality rear shocks would make a great improvement over OEM ones too!
Nice outcome