BMW K bikes (Bricks)


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zaubertuba

zaubertuba
Silver member
Silver member
So thanks to your guys' help, I got my front fork seals changed out and back together handily....I also had my local shop change out the front tire for a Michelin Pilot-Activ (The old tires still have some tread but are of dubious and unknown age).

WOW! I'd forgotten what it was like to *not* wallow in a hard stop--and the bike really soaks up the bumps so much better now.  Turn-in also feels soooo much better!

HOWEVER - Now I'm experiencing a mild up-down oscillation that seems related to tire rotation speed.  It changes with speed, doesn't cut out when I pull in the clutch, feels more pronounced over 40 mph, and doesn't change in sweeping turns in either direction.  It feels OK around town (doesn't influence handling) but the increase in oscillation over 40 is enough to give me serious pause about taking the bike on the freeway.

Could I have forgotten something putting the front end back together? Or could it be a balance issue from the shop?


__________________________________________________
1985 K100RS
    

Dai

Dai
Life time member
Life time member
Sounds like the shop didn't balance the tyre. Quick check as no tyre is ever in perfect balance with a rim - do you have any nice shiny new stick-on balance weights on the rim? If not, there's your problem.


__________________________________________________
1983 K100 naked upgraded to K100LT spec after spending time as an RS and an RT
1987 K100RT
Others...
1978 Moto Guzzi 850-T3, 1979 Moto Guzzi 850-T3 California,1993 Moto Guzzi 1100ie California
2020 Royal Enfield Bullet 500
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
+1 on balance.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

MartinW

MartinW
Life time member
Life time member
There is a dot either yellow or red on the sidewall of your tyre. This is there to help with balancing and should align with your tyre valve. If you have no weights and the dot does not line up it will most probably be out of balance.
Regards Martin.

    

Laitch

Laitch
Life time member
Life time member
zaubertuba wrote:
Could I have forgotten something putting the front end back together? Or could it be a balance issue from the shop?
Yes! Smile


__________________________________________________
1995 K75 90,000 miles
    

duck

duck
Life time member
Life time member
I use this. No weights to deal with and it dynamically balances the tires as well as providing some puncture protection.

Fork seal and front tire change....oscillation.... 353-177_A


__________________________________________________
Current stable:
86 Custom K100 (standard fairing, K75 Belly pan, Ceramic chromed engine covers, paralever)
K75 Frankenbrick (Paralever, K11 front end, hybrid ABS, K1100RS fairing, radial tires)
86 K75C Turbo w/ paralever
94 K1100RS
93 K1100LT
91 K1
93 K75S (K11 front end)
91 K75S (K1 front end)
14 Yamaha WR250R
98 Taxi Cab K1200RS
14 K1600GT
http://www.ClassicKBikes.com
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
duck wrote:I use this. No weights to deal with and it dynamically balances the tires as well as providing some puncture protection.

Fork seal and front tire change....oscillation.... 353-177_A
How messy are tire changes.  There are tire shops around here that won't put a tire with that stuff on their machine or if they do add a $$$ charge for the mess.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

duck

duck
Life time member
Life time member
I've never had issues with tire changes at shops.

One time I made the fateful decision to try to change tires manually with tire irons just to see if I could do it and how hard it was. (I did it but it was a lot of work and decided that in the future it was worth paying somebody else to do it.)  The tires were a couple of years old and the stuff had set up so it stuck to the inside of the tires and made no mess.

And it doesn't take a whole lot of it. I had new tires installed for my K1100RS last week and that took 7oz in the front and 10oz in the rear. (I made it very clear to the shop that I only wanted the tires mounted, not balanced.)

And it does work well. After getting the new tires installed last week I had the bike up over 115 and it rode very smoothly.

Another product which uses the same principle (automatic dynamic balancing) is Dynabeads.  From what I've read those tend to go all over the place.


__________________________________________________
Current stable:
86 Custom K100 (standard fairing, K75 Belly pan, Ceramic chromed engine covers, paralever)
K75 Frankenbrick (Paralever, K11 front end, hybrid ABS, K1100RS fairing, radial tires)
86 K75C Turbo w/ paralever
94 K1100RS
93 K1100LT
91 K1
93 K75S (K11 front end)
91 K75S (K1 front end)
14 Yamaha WR250R
98 Taxi Cab K1200RS
14 K1600GT
http://www.ClassicKBikes.com
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
Apologies for the hijack.

I do my own tires and when I rode enduros I used that green slime shit.  What a mess!  The tire store where I get tires for the family four-wheelers has a sign that says they charge a $10 clean up fee if that stuff is in your tire. 

I used the DynaBeads once, and yes, they get everywhere.  I'm still finding them 2 years later.

If the stuff hardens up in the tire and doesn't flow, what happens when the bike is parked for a long time?  Or if you take it out for a ride in the winter when the temperatures are in the low 30's?  Will it flow back to where it needs to be to balance the tire?

I like the idea of a dynamic balancer in the tire, but so far I've not had good experiences.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

duck

duck
Life time member
Life time member
Point-Seven-five wrote:If the stuff hardens up in the tire and doesn't flow, what happens when the bike is parked for a long time?  Or if you take it out for a ride in the winter when the temperatures are in the low 30's?  Will it flow back to where it needs to be to balance the tire?

I've wondered about this also and don't really have a good answer.  However, since I have several bikes, some of them don't get ridden for extended periods of time but when I do pull them out they seem to ride fine. Somewhat of a mystery to me.


__________________________________________________
Current stable:
86 Custom K100 (standard fairing, K75 Belly pan, Ceramic chromed engine covers, paralever)
K75 Frankenbrick (Paralever, K11 front end, hybrid ABS, K1100RS fairing, radial tires)
86 K75C Turbo w/ paralever
94 K1100RS
93 K1100LT
91 K1
93 K75S (K11 front end)
91 K75S (K1 front end)
14 Yamaha WR250R
98 Taxi Cab K1200RS
14 K1600GT
http://www.ClassicKBikes.com
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
Have you gotten any comments from the guys who change your tires?  Maybe the stuff isn't as messy anymore?


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

duck

duck
Life time member
Life time member
There was one time where I had a very new rear get a nasty wide gash in it so I needed to replace it.  I took it to Chaparral (a huge MC store in SoCal) and told them ahead of time that the tire had Ride-On in it.  They didn't seem to mind and made no comments about it when I picked it up after installation.


__________________________________________________
Current stable:
86 Custom K100 (standard fairing, K75 Belly pan, Ceramic chromed engine covers, paralever)
K75 Frankenbrick (Paralever, K11 front end, hybrid ABS, K1100RS fairing, radial tires)
86 K75C Turbo w/ paralever
94 K1100RS
93 K1100LT
91 K1
93 K75S (K11 front end)
91 K75S (K1 front end)
14 Yamaha WR250R
98 Taxi Cab K1200RS
14 K1600GT
http://www.ClassicKBikes.com
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
That's good to hear.  I might just have to try it.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

KiwiK100

KiwiK100
Gold member
Gold member
Please Nooooo, don't morph this thread into the pros and cons of self balancing beads and similar voodoo options. This is seconded only to an oil thread...
Check very carefully where the tyre site against the rim. There is normally a fine raised rubber 'line' and this should be the same distance out from the rim all the way around. There is a possibility that the tyre is not fitted correctly to the rim. IMHO an unbalanced tyre generally won't cause you any vibrations unless you are travelling at pretty high speeds. Where I live no shop was able to balance tyres so our local MCC purchased a static balancer. Until then, I rode with unbalanced tyres on my K1200RS for several years and never had a vibration issue even when the speedo needle was facing south


__________________________________________________
Current rides:
2020 R1250RS. Metallic black with all the fruit
1983 K100C. Red. Krauzer fairing.
1984 K100RS. Madison silver.
2002 K1200RS. Owned from new. Pacific Blue, Ohlins, Speiglers, Fiamms, HID. 186,000km SOLD Crying or Very sad
1991 K1. Schwartz metallic black, 18 month frame off restoration. 74,000km SOLD Crying or Very sad
1987 K100RS Style. Black, Ohlins, Race Tech springs, Braided lines. Fully restored. 53,000 miles. SOLD Crying or Very sad
The family history:
1951 AJS 500 single - my Dads ride
1953 Triumph Terrier - my Mum's ride
1916 Triumph Type H, Battle of the Somme, France WW1 - my Grandads ride
    

92KK 84WW Olaf

avatar
Life time member
Life time member
KiwiK100 wrote:Please Nooooo, don't morph this thread into the pros and cons of self balancing beads and similar voodoo options. This is seconded only to an oil thread...
Check very carefully where the tyre site against the rim. There is normally a fine raised rubber 'line' and this should be the same distance out from the rim all the way around. There is a possibility that the tyre is not fitted correctly to the rim. IMHO an unbalanced tyre generally won't cause you any vibrations unless you are travelling at pretty high speeds. Where I live no shop was able to balance tyres so our local MCC purchased a static balancer. Until then, I rode with unbalanced tyres on my K1200RS for several years and never had a vibration issue even when the speedo needle was facing south

If in doubt with this you can overinflate to correctly seat the bead evenly and then let the pressure back to what it should be.

Wheel should be balanced but a balanced wheel may still have a tyre out of true in which case if this does seat it correctly may solve your problem. However may need to rebalance after.


__________________________________________________
1992 K100LT 0193214 Bertha Blue 101,000 miles
1984 K100RT 0022575 Brutus Baja Red 578 bought 36,000 now 89,150 miles
1997 K1100LT 0188024 Wotan Mystic Red 689 58,645 now 106,950 miles Deceased.
1983 K100RS 0011157 Fricka 606 Alaska Blue 29,495 miles Damn K Pox Its a Bat outta Hell Now 58,200 miles. 
1996 K1100LT 0233004 Lohengrin Mystic Red 38,000 miles currently 51,800 miles.
1983 K100RS 0004449 Odette R100 colours 58,000 miles. Sprint fairing now 63,390 miles

Past:
1968 Yamaha 80 YG1
1971 Yamaha 125 YAS-1
1968 Honda 125 SS
1970 Honda CD 175
1973 Honda CB500-4
Honda CX 500
    

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
My apologies for the hijack.  If they would be so kind, would the moderators remove my posts from this thread.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

Rick G

Rick G
admin
admin
Marginally off topic maybe but hijack.... definitely not.

What I like about the principal of the Dyna beads or the green goo stuff is that often a tyre needs to be re balanced at some time of its life but the beads or goo remove that need and keep the running smooth right to the end.  That said I just use the weights for the reasons above, green slimy goo and beads in all corners of the cave.


__________________________________________________
"Man sacrifices his health in order to make money.
Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health.
And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived."   Dalai Lama


Bikes 1999 K1100 LT with a Big Block 1200
    

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