MajBach
Well-known member
Thought I would start a new thread after reading another about excessive vibration.
Ive owned five inline 4s and the FJ is the only one that I consistently suffer from hand numbness (I thought inline 4s were supposed to be the engines that experienced the least vibration?). Now I am not complaining, after all I have a 2009 with 70,000 miles on it so clearly I enjoy the ride, but, I would like to minimize it if possible and understand a little more about vibrations.
About 6 weeks ago, I installed and balanced tires myself for the first time. A few weeks earlier, I also did a lot of maintenance like TBS, valves and general lubing of parts and had a Penske shock installed and the forks re-valved. My first ride with the bike post-overhaul I observed so much vibration in the bars I almost thought I wouldn't be able to continue the trip I had planned. I either got used to it or the vibration subsided and life was great again, but, I still experience numb hands every ride( despite grip-puppies and bar weights), but some rides far more than others. Last night on my ride home, I seemed to feel a lower frequency vibration more like a shimmy that got worse the faster I went. It wasn't an in-your-face feeling but enough that I noticed it and tried to find a pattern related to speed or rpms. It was the first time I had even wondered is there a wheel out of balance? On a car, this is more noticeable either a steering wheel vibration or noticeable in a mirror or empty seat. I've always wondered what an out of balance bike tire feels like and if it really matters. When I got home, I checked and confirmed none of the weights had been thrown. Ive got almost 6000 miles on those tires now (PR2s) with no noticeable wear or cupping.
Finally there is the TBS. I hate having to do this. The symptoms of out-of-balance are so annoying, the fix so satisfying but, so very short-lived, like 1000-2000 miles. And currently, my bike could use one.
So, I am wondering, which of these can contribute to hand numbness? An out-of-balance throttle body shouldn't have any impact at highway speeds, correct? And how do you really know if a tire needs balancing once on the bike? Can this cause high frequency vibration in the bike? How about suspension settings? And if so, which way, i.e. softer = less/more vibration?
(Edited for formatting)
Ive owned five inline 4s and the FJ is the only one that I consistently suffer from hand numbness (I thought inline 4s were supposed to be the engines that experienced the least vibration?). Now I am not complaining, after all I have a 2009 with 70,000 miles on it so clearly I enjoy the ride, but, I would like to minimize it if possible and understand a little more about vibrations.
About 6 weeks ago, I installed and balanced tires myself for the first time. A few weeks earlier, I also did a lot of maintenance like TBS, valves and general lubing of parts and had a Penske shock installed and the forks re-valved. My first ride with the bike post-overhaul I observed so much vibration in the bars I almost thought I wouldn't be able to continue the trip I had planned. I either got used to it or the vibration subsided and life was great again, but, I still experience numb hands every ride( despite grip-puppies and bar weights), but some rides far more than others. Last night on my ride home, I seemed to feel a lower frequency vibration more like a shimmy that got worse the faster I went. It wasn't an in-your-face feeling but enough that I noticed it and tried to find a pattern related to speed or rpms. It was the first time I had even wondered is there a wheel out of balance? On a car, this is more noticeable either a steering wheel vibration or noticeable in a mirror or empty seat. I've always wondered what an out of balance bike tire feels like and if it really matters. When I got home, I checked and confirmed none of the weights had been thrown. Ive got almost 6000 miles on those tires now (PR2s) with no noticeable wear or cupping.
Finally there is the TBS. I hate having to do this. The symptoms of out-of-balance are so annoying, the fix so satisfying but, so very short-lived, like 1000-2000 miles. And currently, my bike could use one.
So, I am wondering, which of these can contribute to hand numbness? An out-of-balance throttle body shouldn't have any impact at highway speeds, correct? And how do you really know if a tire needs balancing once on the bike? Can this cause high frequency vibration in the bike? How about suspension settings? And if so, which way, i.e. softer = less/more vibration?
(Edited for formatting)
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