
Seems to be when braking hard and then coming back up. I have also noticed it when the front brake is applied and push the front up and down really hard.
Any ideas as to what it could be .



Stratman wrote:Taper bearings
I should have mentioned that PaulStratman wrote:Taper bearings are the way forward.
Most owners who have replaced their steering head bearings use tapered bearings as Paul mentions. The difference is a much bigger surface contact area with the tapered roller type, so they last (when greased at the correct service intervals) much longer than the standard ball bearing type. Also the taper roller type can be tightened up if some play is detected in them, making them more or less as good as new. Usually because of the design of the ball bearing type, if play is detected in them, there is indents in the bearing seats, so tightening them up wont really help that much because the wear is still there. The picture below shows both types used for the steering head. The bearings have been partially taken apart to show the ball bearings themselves and the rollers on the other two:-pariah wrote:Stratman wrote:Taper bearings
Ditto. I was always having to tink about with the OEM ones but once the tapers are in they are sooo much better. You do need to overtighten them first to reall press them home, then back off and reset correctly. Still think that they way you have to adjust them is primitive though - there must be a better way of designing these things (not just VTR ones)sirch345 wrote:Yes Mike, I do recommend using tapered roller bearings for your steering head, I wouldn't use anything else.
Cheers,
Chris.
Whilst an uneven wear mark can be indicative of faulty forks, bents frame, badly aligned rear tyre ect. I've been reliably informed by an old motor cycle mechanic that I'm not the demon on the round abouts I thought I was, or, so fantastic on right hand bends I can wear one side of my tyre faster than the other, but, it's just the camber of the road always putting more pressure on the right hand side of the tyreIn addition, one side of the front is far more worn and scrubbed than the other, which makes me think this could be an internal fork problem.