spalkin
Well-known member
I'm using the DynaBeads with my Avon Storms (read; tires that don't have any heavy mark) and they're running smooth. I figure this is because of any of three things:I started using Dynamic Balance Beads on my last set of new tires. HAppen to be Road Smarts as well. I just hit 4k miles on them, the tires still look new and The tires are still perfectly balanced and no wieghts at all. I still let the deal mount the tires but I instruct them not to balance them, I dump the beads in myself.
1) if motorcycle tires are a bit out of balance, you can't tell.
2) the DynaBeads work
3) my tires came out perfectly balanced. (they didn't)
I used my Mark Parnes on the wheels without tires, front: 1/4oz out, rear: 1/2oz out.
With the tires mounted, front: 1/3oz out, rear: 3/4oz out.
I didn't bother trying to re-orient the tires to dial that out.
Put in the recommended 1oz of beads in the front and 2oz in the rear.
I still don't fully know that DynaBeads work. In my engineer's mind, there is no way that those beads can seek out the light spot. If anything, they would seek out the heavy spot and make things worse.
Conclusion: If they don't work, and they're going to the heavy spot, that would mean that my front wheel for example would be 1 1/3oz out while spinning.
Like I said above, smooth as can be.
I guess the question is: how much does a tire/wheel assembly need to be off before you can feel it?
I've never had vibration or out of balance issues with any bike I've owned.
I do know that there's nothing better than positively balancing them and applying weights, and that that should last the life of the tire. Next set I'll go back to weights, balance the hell out of them and see if I can tell any diff.