UncleSam wrote:I have felt head shake a few times when I first got the bike, but now I just hold the bars a bit tighter....
half_empty1 wrote:one tip ive heard of over here in the uk for 10r stability,
from a freind whos partner is a race mechanic and also a race shool instructor,
is lowering the yokes (think you call them triple clamps over there) over the forks so 2-3mm is showing,
it does quicken the steering slightly, but also puts a little more weight over the front of the bike to give more stability.
ive not tried it myself yet, cos ive not had any head shaking from my 10r.
its worth a try, you might not need to spend loads of $ on a damper/stabiliser.
dave.
Gosling1 wrote:at the risk of being howled down, only poorly-handling bikes ( read poor set-up) require a steering damper. (*runs and hides* from ZX10 owners)
Gosling1 wrote:at the risk of being howled down, only poorly-handling bikes ( read poor set-up) require a steering damper. (*runs and hides* from ZX10 owners)
Steering dampers are used as a *solution* to poor handling, which itself can have a myriad of causes:
Bad/worn/incorrectly inflated tyres;
Loose/incorrectly adjusted steering head bearings;
Worn wheel bearings;
INCORRECT WHEEL ALIGNMENT ( #1 cause)
Poorly adjusted suspension;
Incorrect weight/height of fork oil;
Stuffed rear suspension;
Worn swingarm bearings;
etc, etc, etc;
as you can see, there are heaps of areas that should be fixed up, before you just bung on a steering damper........
A bike with a good set-up will headshake over really bad bumps, but IT WILL CORRECT ITSELF.......Steve TLS hit the nail on the head - loosen your grip when the headshake occurs, and accelerate ( or keep speed the same,), but DON'T button off, this will make it worse.....
just imho of course.......![]()
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