vintageveloce
Husqvarna
AA Class
Just put new tires on the TE250. Being new to dirt bikes I wasn't sure whether people balance dirt whels or not. There certainly were not any weights on the stock wheels.
The shop checked them for me. They said (correctly) that it was about 2.5oz on the front and 4.5oz on the rear. With the giant steel wheel weights they had he couldn't do it, it would have been far too many (18 on the rear!).
I considered this and while I wouldn't use the shops weights I have to believe this massive imbalance makes a difference,especially in the desert at 60 or on the highway for a dual sport! IF you are going 15 mph with muddy tires I'd guess it doesn't matter, but thats not my kind of riding.
I also found someone who said Rim locks typically weigh around 3 oz on the front and 4 oz on the rear. That was about my situation. Some guys say they just put two rim locks on, opposite each other, to solve the problem. But my tires were already mounted, and I hesitate to make it harder to change the tires.
I also read that you could balance just the rim and put the weights inside the wheel, but again it was too late for that.
At any rate, I did it the old school way, I bought some heavy solid solder. I've balanced street wheels at home before and just did it on my Harbor Freight stand. Looks clean but it is a lot of solder! Pics attached for your amusement:
The shop checked them for me. They said (correctly) that it was about 2.5oz on the front and 4.5oz on the rear. With the giant steel wheel weights they had he couldn't do it, it would have been far too many (18 on the rear!).
I considered this and while I wouldn't use the shops weights I have to believe this massive imbalance makes a difference,especially in the desert at 60 or on the highway for a dual sport! IF you are going 15 mph with muddy tires I'd guess it doesn't matter, but thats not my kind of riding.
I also found someone who said Rim locks typically weigh around 3 oz on the front and 4 oz on the rear. That was about my situation. Some guys say they just put two rim locks on, opposite each other, to solve the problem. But my tires were already mounted, and I hesitate to make it harder to change the tires.
I also read that you could balance just the rim and put the weights inside the wheel, but again it was too late for that.
At any rate, I did it the old school way, I bought some heavy solid solder. I've balanced street wheels at home before and just did it on my Harbor Freight stand. Looks clean but it is a lot of solder! Pics attached for your amusement: