HI,
i just got back to the gasser family with a 2015 ec200, having owened an older ec300 a few years back.
so my question is, can a bike be rather unstable at higher speeds due to too little sag and/or lesser quality tires?
i got the bike with a fresh set of tires of the reputable brand "RAZORBACK" feral 2 type. these feel as very soft studded tires, never touched such soft tires...
the tires do have some new BIB mousses mounted.
there's also a terrible imbalance in the rear wheel.
in the stand and on the street, from 50-60km/h and more the wheel starts to occilate up and down :-/
i'll take the tire off and inspect how heavy the tireclamp weighs.
on testride the bike felt very high in the back, after measuring, it only had about 75mm of race sag instead of the recommended +-105mm.
i set it at 95mm now and still feels less stable then i'd like.
will the extra 10mm make a noticeable difference in stability?
the bike is ok to ride, just not that confidence inspiring +60-70 km/h (over uneven surfaces)
curious for your toughts
cheers, Hannes.
i just got back to the gasser family with a 2015 ec200, having owened an older ec300 a few years back.
so my question is, can a bike be rather unstable at higher speeds due to too little sag and/or lesser quality tires?
i got the bike with a fresh set of tires of the reputable brand "RAZORBACK" feral 2 type. these feel as very soft studded tires, never touched such soft tires...
the tires do have some new BIB mousses mounted.
there's also a terrible imbalance in the rear wheel.
in the stand and on the street, from 50-60km/h and more the wheel starts to occilate up and down :-/
i'll take the tire off and inspect how heavy the tireclamp weighs.
on testride the bike felt very high in the back, after measuring, it only had about 75mm of race sag instead of the recommended +-105mm.
i set it at 95mm now and still feels less stable then i'd like.
will the extra 10mm make a noticeable difference in stability?
the bike is ok to ride, just not that confidence inspiring +60-70 km/h (over uneven surfaces)
curious for your toughts

cheers, Hannes.