Most of the TM400's handling woes had little to do with the frame. The major problem was the engine's erratic power delivery that can be easily fixed by a simple ignition change to the TS ignition or adapting something from another bike. The stock CDI ignition curve is junk and there isn't enough flywheel weight in the pissy internal rotor. Having said that, the frame isn't anything flash either but
nothing coming out of Japan in 1971 set any handling standards. The plastic swingarm bushes are crap so going with the phosphor bronze items will be a noticeable difference. Another change that will help the bike turn much better is to bring the trail back a tad by fitting triple clamps with less offset. Bringing the rake in a tad works too, more easily done by fitting shocks about an inch longer than stock than by frame surgery or triple clamp mods. Fit cartridge emulators to the forks and a decent set of shocks and lo and behold-you've got a decent open class pre 75 mount.
I'm NOT a Suzuki guy by any stretch, I have one Yamaha eye and one Maico eye (with a British third eye in there somewhere
) but it's always bothered me that certain bikes got such a bad reputation from the American press that really wasn't warranted. The Yamaha SC500, '82 Maico and Cannondale are just a few of the bikes that have had to live with a reputation they didn't really deserve. The TM400 and the other three are all excellent bikes
once the bugs are sorted out. The TM400 has over the years been a great open class bike that can hold its own with almost any bike from the period. If the late, great Andy Caldecott was still with us he'd be on here raving about the TM400's abilities. Granted Andy was a very special rider but his TM400 was nothing special at all, it just had the generic problems that held the bike back sorted and as those of us who were lucky enough to watch Andy ride the bike for the 10 years he raced VMX will know, he was almost unbeatable on that big TM, Maico mounted Ronnie Dinsdale being the only rider I ever saw beat him fair and square.