87 front fork & tire alignment
#1
87 front fork & tire alignment
87 MK1 , so today i put my new tires on rode off fine but after a lil bit i notice a slight wobble in the front . So after a 15 min ride i pulled over and notice that my tire did not exactly line up with the front fender. Also notice befor i changed the tires that my ignition key didnt line up with the gauges . When lined up the tire is off center .when tire is straight the ignition key is slightly over to the left . Not sure if its the rim or the forks . I didnt feel the wobble befor becuz im pretty sure the tire formed and the wobble disappeared
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#5
That wouldn't result in misalignment. The tyre should have an arrow on the sidewall indicating (preferred ) direction of rotation.
I believe Sprock's answer is the correct one. It may be that the forks have moved slightly in the triple tree clamps if they were not tight enough. Make sure the top of each fork is the same height, and if needs be, loosen off all the clamps (having the bike solidly supported so it doesn't crash to the ground), align the triple trees, fork height and retighten.
Cheers, SB
#6
just another question .. the tire is alot more to the left side of the fender towards the front and right side towards the back is closer also .kinda looks like this l\l .not so dramatic but just slightly , just enought so i could see just a it of rim. could it be that the rim itself is twisted ?
#7
just another question .. the tire is alot more to the left side of the fender towards the front and right side towards the back is closer also .kinda looks like this l\l .not so dramatic but just slightly , just enought so i could see just a it of rim. could it be that the rim itself is twisted ?
Cheers, SB
#8
Almost looks like the spacers on the axle were put on incorrectly.
I see what you're talking about...how the fender is off-set to the tire.
I'm just speculating, since I'm not sure if they are 'handed' on that model.
Also, Sprock sort of got ahead of himself. Only loosen the bottom clamps
(on the tripples). If you loosen both sets (without supporting the bikes front-end),
it will slide down the tubes. Then it's a hassle to get it back off it's 'knees'.
After you loosen the lowers, get on the bike, grab the brakes and pump the front-end.
Often, that's all you need to do, to re-align the axle to the bars. Then, re-tighten the
lower clamps.
If that doesn't do the job, have a buddy hold the tire, while you torque the bars,
(after re-loosening the lower tripple clamps). Give it the MK-1 eyeball, and then
cinch it all back down when you've achieved proper alignment.
Hope this gives you a couple of avenues to explore, Ern
I see what you're talking about...how the fender is off-set to the tire.
I'm just speculating, since I'm not sure if they are 'handed' on that model.
Also, Sprock sort of got ahead of himself. Only loosen the bottom clamps
(on the tripples). If you loosen both sets (without supporting the bikes front-end),
it will slide down the tubes. Then it's a hassle to get it back off it's 'knees'.
After you loosen the lowers, get on the bike, grab the brakes and pump the front-end.
Often, that's all you need to do, to re-align the axle to the bars. Then, re-tighten the
lower clamps.
If that doesn't do the job, have a buddy hold the tire, while you torque the bars,
(after re-loosening the lower tripple clamps). Give it the MK-1 eyeball, and then
cinch it all back down when you've achieved proper alignment.
Hope this gives you a couple of avenues to explore, Ern
#10