You are the MAN! Tell the truth, was it the test ride on the 6 second nitro
burning pavement ripping dirt throwing Renthal modified Big Gun sporting
Kenda shod Moose skidplated Happytrail highway pegged Progressive sprung
Fastline equipped "CA Stu Special" (tm) that made you do it?
I just put the new brakepads on this weekend, now it is EBC-stopped, too...
Congrats on the new scoot, can I ride it off a cliff?
CA Stu
From: scottobme@...
Subject: Re: Vibration
I have owned both a 98 DR 650 and now a 2001 KLR 650 and the difference in
handlebar (& other) vibration
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 12:47 pm
handlebar (& other) vibration
All:
Lotsa traffic about vibration. Some thoughts from an ex-factory
service rep:
- Every part on a motorcycle has a natural harmonic frequency at
which it will pick up and amplify vibration coming from
elsewhere, be it engine, tires, or road surface. The KLR's
mirrors are particulary prone to this as they're on a fairly
small diameter, long stalk that's tailor-made to induce
fuzziness. Solution: shorter mirror stalks with more robust
material, or rubber dampers a'la XR650L (though the rubber must
be "tuned" so as to move the vibes out of the KLR's natural
vibration range, which may or may not be the case). I'm very
pleased with the Bikemaster "GP" mirrors installed earlier this
year and would recommend them as a good, cheap, *partial*
solution to the problem.
- Increasing the weight at the *end* of a handlebar will - to
some extent - damp the harmonic vibration in the handlebar. This
can be done with bar-end weights, but the accessory kinds I've
seen look to be too light to have much effect. I tried some solid
steel bar stock inside mine but my design was faulty and it
didn't work. Seems like it should, if you're willing to cement
them in place (and if you can find round stock the proper size or
are willing to turn-down some)
- Loose motor mount bolts are a common cause of excess vibration.
I found mine loose at the 600mile service. If allowed to run
loose there can be damage to the engine cases and if bolts are
over-torqued in a good-faith attempt to keep them tight, they can
stretch to the point that the nuts are "bottomed", making you
think they're tight when the motor is just floating around in the
frame. Pay special attention to the upper engine mount.
- Add-on skid plates or exhaust systems can be responsible for
vibes by improper location that allows interference between the
motor and other bits, transferring vibration upwards to the rider
that should be absorbed in the frame. Look for interference
points and correct them.
- I have seen mis-manufactured frames. What happens is that the
inside dimension between the frame bosses and engine cases is too
large; this results in the engine bolts reaching their normal
torque spec *before* the engine case is clamped properly. If
you've looked everywhere else to no avail, try loosening the
engine bolts up completely and examining the gaps between the
frame bosses and cases: if there is more than about 0.5mm
(0.020"), clearance with the bolt loosened, there may be a
problem. This is fairly common on mass-produced mild steel frames
due to all the welding-induced heating/shrinkage.
IMHO it is extremely unlikely that an imbalance problem would be
present from an improperly-indexed balancer or out-of-tolerance
engine parts. Having said that, though, I'd be suspicious of
vibration that appeared on a high-mileage motor, as tolerances
can increase and lead to vibration in clutches, etc., even though
the motor is running fine. I have never ridden a single of any
brand that was vibration-free and doubt I ever will - balancers
or none. My A14 seems buzzy only after I get off the R1100RT I
own, yet my sense of that disappears after a few minutes
"adjustment". From some of the owner descriptions in this thread,
though, I suspect somebody's bike has a problem that isn't
imaginary.
Hope this is helpful to someone.
Tom Bowman
A14 "Stella"

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