popkat wrote:Off set or at an angle ?, if it's off set check the spacers on the front wheel are in the right way round, they maybe different lengths, look if your discs are evenly spaced to the forks and are running central in the calipers. I still think the amount your saying it's out by isn't too bad as long as the bike rides ok. have you tried adjusting the rear wheel to straighten it up, could also be the chain adjuster markers are a little out, not un common. As for frame straighteners the best I know of is Maidstone motorliner centre, a bit too far from you I think.
No it's offset not at an angle.
The spacers on the front are correct, the discs are bang on in both calipers. I measured the wheel itself and it's bang on in the middle of the forks, but the centre of the wheel isn't in the centre of the bike.
As I say if I use a laser plumb line on the front wheel, it draws a laser line right up the centre of the front wheel and this hits the nose of the fairing about 1 cm to the right of the centre.
Yeah I have checked the back wheel and it's definitely not that out of line...sadly I think it's the headstock / frame. Track day booked on the 12th May, just hoping that it holds up.
nt1980 wrote:You dont need a jig just two long straight metal bars drill through one side and put some threaded bar through
this sits on the back wheel drill the next one bolt it these then should run true towards the fron and measure of the front wheel sorry im crap at explaining il try make a diagrham
I have also done this with 2 long straight pieces of wood.
It's quite clear and obvious that it's offset to the left when I do this.
As I say though I measured the top yolk and that appears to be dead in the middle of the bike. Can't get at the bottom one to measure, but I assume it must be that one that's out somehow. Can't really see how though, it's connected to the headstock of the frame, which must mean, if the bottom yolk is throwing the forks out of centre, the headstock on the frame isn't quite straight.....it isn't quite vertical. It wouldn't need to be out by much to throw the forks out to the side by 1cm.
Say the bottom of the forks are 1cm out, and the forks are 1m long, the angle between vertical and the line of the forks would be 0.57 deg out (inv Sin (1/100))
If the bottom yolk is say 100mm from the top yolk, then the bottom yolk would be off centre by about 1mm (10 * Sin(0.57)) - that's not really a lot to measure.