I recall several post awhile ago about re-aligning the front tire, in
that the forks need to be loosened and retightened. It seems mine is
a little off since I dropped it a few weeks ago. Could someone
please be kind enough to provide any specifics and tricks on doing
this right the first time around. I have tried to search the
archives, but haven't found the thread.
Thanks (In Advance)
J.
rear wheel mounting (new problem)
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2006 10:05 pm
front wheel alignment
After a fall, the front wheel ended up facing about 15 degrees to the
left when the handle bars are straight. Otherwise, the bike rides
fine. No wheel wobble or anything.
Can anybody help me correct this? I am new to the bike and don't want
to mess something up.
Thanks
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- Posts: 131
- Joined: Wed May 10, 2006 11:42 am
front wheel alignment
Try getting the front wheel of the ground and loseing the triple tree clamps and turn the forks till things look straight. Just a thought. thats where id start anyhow.
Ernie Campbell
----- Original Message ----- From: Carlos A Sanchez To: DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, July 16, 2006 4:19 AM Subject: [DSN_KLR650] Front wheel alignment After a fall, the front wheel ended up facing about 15 degrees to the left when the handle bars are straight. Otherwise, the bike rides fine. No wheel wobble or anything. Can anybody help me correct this? I am new to the bike and don't want to mess something up. Thanks [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Posts: 3355
- Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2001 3:37 pm
front wheel alignment
If you have a lift, raise the bike so front is off the ground,
loosen the triple calmps, straighten the wheel and lightly snug on
bolt on each side to hold in place, spin the front wheel by hand and
quick grab the front brake, the sudden stop should make everything
line up, at least it did for me yesterday.
Or the field method... find a tree or a utility pole place the front
end next to the solid object and hit the wheel against it to make it
straight.
Good reason not to over tighten that triple, forks
can twist a bit in a minor fall and not bend.
Consult the manual and torque as spec'd I used a 1/4" socket and did
till it felt right for me. (internal torque wrench in arms I reckon)
Dooden
A15 Green Ape
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "Carlos A Sanchez"
wrote:

the> > After a fall, the front wheel ended up facing about 15 degrees to
want> left when the handle bars are straight. Otherwise, the bike rides > fine. No wheel wobble or anything. > Can anybody help me correct this? I am new to the bike and don't
> to mess something up. > Thanks >
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- Posts: 108
- Joined: Wed Jun 09, 2004 10:37 pm
rear wheel mounting (new problem)
I would double check to make sure that you have all of the spacers in
the correct order and also not backwards.But a missing spaces would
cause looseness, not necessarily binding. It is also possible that
the alignment may be way off. Look at the adjuster nuts at the back
of each swingarm and tap them with a rubber mallet to make sure that
they are all of the way in (assuming that the alignment was good
before you started). With the tire off, these things often slide
backwards. Larger knobbies can also rub against the chain guide but
that should be pretty obvious.
Good luck,
Craig
A-18
San Jose CA
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "wefixit4u" wrote: > > Guys, thanks for all the replies, however new problem has developed. > As soon as I get the axle to the right side of the swingarm, the wheel > binds up and the axle needs hammered through the swingarm hole. Up to > that point, the wheel spins freely and the brake works fine. But as > soon as I reach the right hole, the wheel binds. Do I have a problem > with this new Dunlop D607, large tire???? But that wouldn't make > sense with the wheel off the ground?? Bearings are all good, mechanic > that changed the tires confirmed. HELP!!! leaving for 2,000 mile > trip next Sunday!! > > Thanks, Chris >
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