This bike has been changed so many times in 9 years. It’s been high (which looks really fast) and it’s been low. I’ve tried triple clamps with different offsets and the frame has been deraked. I’ve also run 4 different length swingarms.
This only refers to the last lot of changes, not the last 9 years!
I dropped the rear of the bike until it stopped kicking under acceleration on square edged bumps. I figure the steeper swingarm angle was pulling the rear axle under the bike (anti squating) and causing the rear to stiffen up.
I was running the rake at about 27-28 degrees and thought it was quite good at turning. At this setting there was 75mm of fork leg above the triples, with the current forks.
To ensure there was a noticeable change we put the fork legs flush with the triple and tried it with care.
The bike turned into corners pretty much the same. At the point where you make the turn there was no longer any push when the power was applied. I can sum this up by saying that you now had the confidence to open the throttle and not have to wonder if the front would hold or not. With or without power the bike just simply turned. Exiting a corner it was easier to hold a tight line.
Corners could be taken tighter with confidence, on a really tight corner you can just turn the bars and the bike will follow. The steering feels lighter. The bike will slide much more predictably than before. Straight line stability is total.
We pulled the fork legs up 20mm and tried it. The preciseness in the steering had gone. When sliding it almost had a dead spot in the centre and you had to keep correcting. The ability to turn into a tight corner was not there and the front felt like it would push but didn’t.
We dropped the fork legs about 15mm down into the top clamp (not recommended!) the bike became very tail happy and would slide at any excuse. The steering became a bit slow it and wouldn’t hold the inside of a turn.
This Sunday I have two other sets of triple clamps to try, one with more and one with less offset. I’ll also be trying different fork heights, fork springs and another pair of shocks with the same springs but different damping. I have a friend who is a far better rider than me to help. I ride first but don’t tell him what I think. I don’t tell him what I’ve changed and then quiz him when he stops. So far we’ve reached the same conclusions.
This link (scroll down)
http://forums.mxtrax.co.uk/showthread.php?t=36080&page=4has a pic of a Cheney Yamaha 500. I’ll try and get a pic of mine but the proportions are much the same. When I first saw this pic a few years ago I thought it looks like it wouldn’t turn but Mr Cheney knew a bit about making motorcycles handle
What have I learned from all this, that I know far less about motorcycles than I though I did.