One main thing you didn't touch on was tire to tire alignment. Hence why the notches are on the back wheel. If you move your back wheel for any reason make sure it is aligned correctly. This is a major cause of speed wobble.
@drasticthompson199510 ай бұрын
Tank slapper will happen till the front and rear tire come back into center.
@DTPGMedia58510 ай бұрын
@@JayyBird93 self explanitory statement... either you or the handles slap the tank and it gives the bike a input to react and it normaly fixes it with that.
@julian2356110 ай бұрын
@@JayyBird93 your handlebars go left and right without user input and that tends to slap the tank left and right. Again, it's in the name.
@t.s.360610 ай бұрын
@@DTPGMedia585 🤣
@t.s.360610 ай бұрын
🤣
@pierrewilliams153310 ай бұрын
I'm from the UK and passed my bike test in 1983. This involved the examiner being on foot and watching you ride for as long as you were visible to him. For about half the test, you weren't visible to him at all. I know tests have become tougher since but what my 42 years of riding has taught me is that all new riders should learn what all main parts of a bike are - and how to make sure they're working properly. This should absolutely be part of the test and wish it had been for mine because it would have saved me from two horrific lock to lock tankslappers that, thankfully I managed to recover from. Sure, I learned over time from friends about the importance of tyre pressures, fork maintenance/operation, wheel alignment etc. But this should have been taught/learned as part of the test. If you're new to riding, teach yourself about this - it's crucial. The fact the test doesn't require it is outrageous. Make sure you don't suffer from this omission.
@--LZ---6 ай бұрын
Darwinism at it's best.
@hongockimquang19944 ай бұрын
About the wheel alignment, at my place it's usually either the manufacturing is trash (well, domestically and horribly made bikes from Chinese licenses) that the whole frame of the bike is messed up, or teenagers' (or dudes with the mindset of one) modding goes wrong. I've been told by my father that I must get friends riding behind me on test rides, filming it on different angle then show me along with their reviews on me riding, in case I want to buy cheap/suspicious/nobrand ones. "You're my only son" he said, and almost a decade later I'm still riding the bike he bought for me - I never bother buying new one out fear that it would make him worry. About "Darwinism", man... Sh..t... I've witnessed so many of its "proofs" that I don't want to utter the word itself...
@Masher85593 ай бұрын
It's quite the opposite now on the actual test, but for the CBT the standards still pretty low.
@cmdrlt.evildead53283 ай бұрын
This is so scary, is this something that only happens to high powered bikes? What about in the 46bhp range like a Triumph 400 for example?
@pierrewilliams15333 ай бұрын
It's possible on any bike I expect but I've only known it happen on bigger bikes. Keep your tyre pressures up on your Triumph and you'll be fine.
@vb7251710 ай бұрын
Had that death wobble happen when I hit multiple potholes merging onto the highway in south east Michigan(Luna Pier). Guessing it was a 3 part combination of death grip and front tire bouncing slightly off to the side after bouncing out of the holes AND accelerating. I did end up putting my weight forward on the bike, loosened my grip on the bars, asked God for some help and it helped a lot
@Jerbraska8 ай бұрын
Yeah sounds like those damn potholes messed up the tire alignment. We have them all over Jersey😒
@kimocureton62628 ай бұрын
Amen😮
@sonnyseabury40517 ай бұрын
Hell, in New Orleans, we don't have potholes. We call them sinkholes.....because of how big they are.
@moze_-5 ай бұрын
I like to call Ohio crater country lol. Highways are "generally" pretty solid, but literally any other road will seemingly have a pothole every 1000 feet.
@sonnyseabury40515 ай бұрын
@moze_- Just like New Orleans in Louisiana, which is why I don't ride my bike in New Orleans. Lastly, people get carjacked all of the time, and I have a rare and fully restored 1985 Yamaha 2 stroke RZ 350 Kenny Robert's Edition Bike, so I'm not taking any chances. Bought from Kaplan Cycles, the best around. They own the New England Motorcycle Museum. Kaplan America is their channel on You Tube. Check them out. You'll thank me later, if you don't already know about them.
@AryzWorld5 ай бұрын
Omg. I think i held my breathe for most of this video. Thats absolutely frightening to find yourself in such a situation. One cant even practice for this if it ever happens
@burner18810 ай бұрын
Really good review and spot on with those points. VERY glad you mentioned tire pressure right from the start. Really important.
@teagreen222010 ай бұрын
Had Yamaha, Suzuki, and Honda. All new from dealer had loose triple clamps/ headsets. Always be aware of mechanical stuff on a motorcycle.
@bryanharrison388910 ай бұрын
ANOTHER BIG MECHANICAL ISSUE THAT CAN CAUSE DEATH WOBBLES IS THE TRIPLE TREE BEARINGS. They gotta be TIGHT ENOUGH, but NOT TOO TIGHT, they can't be DAMAGED, and they need to be WELL LUBRICATED. This is one of the BIGGEST causes of death wobble, and like tires, almost EVERYBODY overlooks them as a possible cause.
@edpushup23 ай бұрын
Yesterday, a friend suffered a fatal accident while driving home. He was driving a high-speed motorbike, so it's possible that he lost the control of his motorbike due to death wobbles. The entire neightborhood has been shocked due to this terrible news. He was a great guy, and everyone in the neighborhood loved him. Thank you for sharing this valuable information. This can save lives!
@malburn159410 ай бұрын
Life saving information, thank you. Clear explanation, great advice re correcting the wobble and the maintenance tips are spot on, great video!
@Bartontopside10 ай бұрын
Dude your the first guy iv heard apart from myself to bang on about tyre pressures! I'm lucky to have lots of older experienced guys around me and they always told me most riders bin there bikes on the roads due to poor tyre pressure and always check them before every ride ! And I always do ❤ 🤟🏻
@philiphomburger10 ай бұрын
I keep an eye on all of the peoples' bikes who show up at the same meets as I do or if I just see them on the road. Its scary how many glaring issues you can catch just glancing at peoples' bikes. Tire pressures are a big one. I can't comprehend how people don't notice because my bike feels SO off if its even 5lbs low. I know its not your or my responsibility, but I make sure to point these things out to people when I see them. I just want everyone to be safe!
@YaHsServent10 ай бұрын
Guys, here is our Savior HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH” YaH is The Heavenly Father YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING YaH was Who they Crucified for our sins YaH was Crucified on an Almond TREE - Ancient Semitic Cuneiform of Moshe (Moses) - Isa Scroll (The Original Isaiah) Isaiah 42:8 "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.” Isaiah 43:11 “I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.” Isaiah 45:5 “I am YaH, and there is none else.”
@heyhey-dl6if10 ай бұрын
yeah, I learned my lesson the hard way... (even tho only damage was clutch lever, mirror and my ego lol) I kinda believed that mechanic did a good job aaaand he didn't. Now I check my tyre pressure before every ride. One note tho, I recommend to buy a good tyre pressure meter (or whatever it's called) bcoz that free air at gas stations is something you cannot rely on. Usually no one checks if it works correctly. My local gas station has that built in pressure meter and it shows lower values (cca by 0,5 - 0,7 bar) than my pressure meter. Which is a lot. I bought an "expensive" one specially tested for accurate measuring. So just be carefull with that free air at gas stations
@peterkukay7 ай бұрын
Hey! Spunky Boyy, I like your channel, you share a lot of important info. I'm 74, started riding at 14. Bought myself a 78' GS1000 in 79' as a college graduation present to myself. Some fraternity ''Biffs & Chads'' mom & dads bought them ones too - invited me to drag race, one of their GS1000 did a tank slapper at 120mph ,bent him & bike. I put heavier fork oil in front air forks, I had a tank slapper racing. Called US Suzuki, told me , measure w/ a dipstick to assure fork oil levels were equal or air pressure in forks would not be equal. This worked, never another wobble. I hope my experience can save some bent bikes & bones.
@suhvearly5 ай бұрын
thank you!
@quizzyjay37510 ай бұрын
As a new rider, l seen one of your vids and loved how you break everything down by step by step. Keep on making great vids man. You helped me maneuver from 4 fingers to 2 on the shifts lever💪
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
Thanks! I’m glad you’re enjoying them💯
@Dodger287910 ай бұрын
I dont have all the answers, but I've been riding for 52 years, am 70, still ride "enthusiastically" AND am still learning! Road surfaces, (especially long longitudinal grooves due to resurfacing, re-grading, roadworks....what ever) can "start the wobble" and your bike is only too happy to join the party! Here in East Texas, the many heavy logging trucks can influence the right lane surfaces. "Read" the road. Sure, the bike can be at fault with tire tread, bad bearings, stabilizer issues, BUT!! ....take some responsibility and DO NOT assume the road surface is in your corner. Once the wobble starts, (I just had one "start" this past week 03/26/24, at 80mph on my normally stable, heavily tuned, modified Harley AND I run Pirelli Night Dragon rubber, front an back. I consider them the greatest for my setup. I was in West Louisiana, [THE worst phuking roads in the USA] and it took me by surprise. Avoid braking, ease off on the gas and cover the rear brake without any sudden pressure and slow things down with love and passion in its lightest form! This is THE ONE AREA where the front anchor IS NOT your friend. Caress that pedal with light a light foot and live to advise others! Above all....Every Success! Ride safe my friends.
@YernBelfus40010 ай бұрын
Holy crap. The Night Dragon is a bias-ply tire, Harley-Davidsons are crap, and you obviously don't know how to ride. I would encourage you to get a competent motorcycle, a full set of proper safety gear, and take the MSF Basic Rider Course for starters. It takes more than that to become an actual rider, but those initial steps would put you much closer to that goal.
@Dodger287910 ай бұрын
@@YernBelfus400 , It would appear you have just proven, how truly uninformed you are in the areas that you decided to dribble your drivel in! However;.....do not fret, as the facts do not give a Rat's Ass about your opinions, so no damage occured. You have however just proven, how truly apt, the old adage still is and how applicable it also still is! "Empty vessels really DO make the most noise!" Try reading the technical information, to discover how many bubbles you are off plumb.
@Dodger28799 ай бұрын
@@YernBelfus400 How remarkably uninformed you are....yet so willing to run your mouth! The good news is that facts do not care about your opinions. Me neither.
@ilyaneidir7229 ай бұрын
hey man i’m also from east texas!! that’s really cool information
@YernBelfus4009 ай бұрын
@@Dodger2879 Wrong again. My background includes being an expert-licensed motorcycle road racer and motorcycle road racing instructor. I have lapped the Snaefel Mountain Course on the Isle of Man during the TT at triple-digit speeds. I have been over 200 mph on my superbike. And I have been paid at the rate of $1,000/hour as a rider and model for the advertising campaign of one of the largest motorcycle manufacturers in the world. So when I tell you that you know nothing, it's because you know nothing. You know LESS than nothing about riding.
@ImnotgoingSideways10 ай бұрын
2:59 That "62" overlay gave me a good laugh.
@matcpet10 ай бұрын
Glad I came across your channel. You give great advice and always keep it interesting. Much love ❤
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
I appreciate that❤️🤘🏻
@YaHsServent10 ай бұрын
Guys, Here is our Savior HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH” YaH is The Heavenly Father YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING YaH was Who they Crucified for our sins YaH was Crucified on an Almond TREE - Ancient Semitic Cuneiform of Moshe (Moses) - Isa Scroll (The Original Isaiah) Isaiah 42:8 "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.” Isaiah 43:11 “I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.” Isaiah 45:5 “I am YaH, and there is none else.”
@ildrkiller_tvli98225 ай бұрын
Appreciation a lot to this man, thank you for being honest and actually caring to help all riders either new or not.
@MyWatchIsEnded10 ай бұрын
I have another tip to prevent speed wobble. Check your front forks for leaks and if they are serviceable make sure that they are at the proper fluid level and even on both sides so that one fork isn't stronger than the other. This is what can induce speed wobble because each fork is fighting each other.
@25aspooner10 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Forks don’t get enough love for the job they do. They turn, they take big impacts (big wheelies), they take the full weight of the motorcycle on hard breaking. And when they leak you lose your handling, damping, and breaks.
@MyWatchIsEnded10 ай бұрын
@@25aspooner the funny part is that steering wheel dampers can actually induce the wobble because they don't allow the opposing forks to harmonize. I've seen videos of motorcycles *with* dampers speed wobble and crash. I don't want to pretend that a few video examples are absolute but I have to say that it makes sense. If you have two forks trying to oppose the other and you death grip the bar, it enhances the wobble. The steering damper behaves like you are gripping the bar constantly and it's good for preventing instability mid-turn on a track but if you think about it, it's counterintuitive in regards to allowing the wobbling forks to stabilize by not 'letting go' of the bar. The damper never 'lets go' if you get what I mean.
@pierrewilliams153310 ай бұрын
Absolutely. I had forks that weren't equally pressured on my old GPz550 and the result were two monster tankslappers that friends told me they were amazed I managed to hang on to.
@MyWatchIsEnded10 ай бұрын
@@pierrewilliams1533 do you happen to know if your motorcycle has serviceable forks? I think it would be beneficial for someone who reads this in the future to know whether or not they can service them.
@JayyBird9310 ай бұрын
@@MyWatchIsEndedI’m interested too. How can you tell?
@kevingray822310 ай бұрын
Absolutely spot on !! Appreciate the knowledge, my friend this can be very helpful to everyone. I’ve been riding 30+ years and you actually just taught me several tips. I look forward to more videos. I am now a follower.
@Davids_Life34510 ай бұрын
bro that's the same bike you were working on, when you showed ppl what to look for in a used bike if your buying one, wow man love your channel, I want a bike soon, so your content really helps, God bless you bro fr fr.
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
I’m glad ur enjoying them, and I’m happy to help in any way I can👊🏻💯 thank you very much!
@Davids_Life34510 ай бұрын
@@SpunkyBoyy yezirrrrrr, thank you bro bro 👉🏻👈🏼✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️💯💯
@qqlelesmbo361210 ай бұрын
man, so nicely summed up and clear to understand. Thank you because it is practically and nicely explained. one grateful here !
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks💯
@Kenword6942010 ай бұрын
One of the only riders worth taking advice from on KZbin
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
Thanks! That means a lot to me👌🏻💯
@jrjames910610 ай бұрын
I've always said respect the bike and the bike will respect you back
@RidingwithDez10 ай бұрын
I say this everyday b4 i get on mine
@Xpunkpro9 ай бұрын
Most don't respect what they are operating.
@johnharris333510 ай бұрын
Great advice. Just wrecked my bike recently.. Another thing I see (even in this video) is guys slam that clutch lever when hauling ass and you can see they actually move the wheel slightly ans this causes speed wobble also. “Loosen up the grip”
@BerserkerBryce9 ай бұрын
Hope you’re alright dude
@marshallrodgers187810 ай бұрын
Excellent video. You saved lives today brother.
@matvarela6 ай бұрын
That clip of the dude almost rear-ending the car during a speed wobble always makes me tense 😬
@1gorSouz48 ай бұрын
I always thought that you were supposed to grab harder when that happens... Good to know the correct way to act in that type of situation.
@patrickhaynes58225 ай бұрын
Wish I could like this a thousand times. Word for word before you said what to do, that's what I was verbalizing while watching.
@CodingJesus10 ай бұрын
This was incredibly helpful. Thanks!
@lovingmylifeasIage674110 ай бұрын
A friend of mine lost his lower left leg from experiencing a speed wobble. I have experienced it too, when hitting a dear carcass in the road at 55 mph. It was a ride I never want go on again.
@Six3SixTay8 ай бұрын
I need to get one on my 636. But I’m SUPER thankful my 2007 Honda Cbr 600rr has the HESD “Honda electronic steering damper”, which they all come with from factory.👌🏽
@stillfrosty10 ай бұрын
If you’re watching this and your bike has spokes it’s extremely important to check your spokes tension regularly loose or broken spokes guarantee death wobbles
@langhamp891210 ай бұрын
Dunlop tire company had done some fairly extensive tests on what causes speed wobbles, and while the factors are many the major culprit seems to be a flat or worn rear tire combined with a pointy front tire. To get out of a speed wobble neither accelerating nor braking nor staying at the same speed had much if any affect; the only thing that seemed to work was the rider dramatically lowering himself ie tucking in. Things like steering dampeners didn't get rid of speed wobbles but only seemed to increase the speed upon which they occurred at. Loose steering head bearings also seemed to cause speed wobbles (and every single Suzuki I've ever owned needed to have their steering head tightened and the pinch bolts adjusted).
@philiphomburger10 ай бұрын
dunlop doing amazing work!
@r32juan10 ай бұрын
I remember a few years back I asked this rider how to come out of a death wobble and he said all you have to do is tuck in and it fixes itself
@andrewstambaugh24010 ай бұрын
Exactly. Change the weight distribution, change the natural frequency.
@pitchforkpeasant621910 ай бұрын
Lane to lane asphalt pours or big parking lots where edges aren’t flattened out which creates a mini curb. Hit too many on an expressway in Florida decades ago. Figured out how to switch lanes in those areas if i changed lanes at all😂. Got real tired of that💩. Only ever happened in that one area too. In hundreds of miles over almost 2 decades
@jaya929810 ай бұрын
tuck in as in, hunch over, lower down and pull yourself in towards the bike, like a turtle retracting into its shell?
@motomikebuilder10 ай бұрын
One thing you didn't mention is a MX tip. Squeeze the tank with your knees and tighten you core. I have the same damper and put heavy oil inside. Rebound damping too slow keeps rake angle steep which creates the wobble but makes it stay planted in the corner. Tire pressure is also temperature sensitive. The track had a chart for tire pressure on a cold day and they were very low.
@Mental_Illboy6 ай бұрын
Thank you for the info sir. I'm a rookie driver, just got my license last month, bought a CB1000R. I was driving with a friend and he had a wobble. He felt down but is relatively okay.
@lothar6549 ай бұрын
I had it a few times, and if you still have enough power left due to not be going toooo fast, I always give more throttle so it lifts the front end a bit. That has helped till so far every time.
@jovangranado13429 ай бұрын
Dude this is why I'm subscribed, super good advice as always.
@RandomGuyComments9 ай бұрын
On my MT09 I chop the throttle a lot. I heard bringing wheelies down hard might cause it but I didn't realize throttle chop + quick gear change could do it too. So used to riding sport bikes for 7 years, getting used to naked bikes. Also didn't realize leaning forward, no front brake, use of back instead all helps. Thanks for this!
@nicnadu0515Ай бұрын
Great video. It’s also important to make sure you have your stock bar ends on
@austingaines93008 ай бұрын
just bought a 2019 zx6r my step bro builds drag racing bikes and suggested a 636 and to run it in low power mode for a while until i can use the full power but this helped a lot with soothing my nerves so thank you
@tokyotovalАй бұрын
3:01 love the 62 hovering over the real speed lmaoo
@StaticVapour5907 ай бұрын
I have experienced a really mild tank slapper. Launched my bike and felt how the front wheel *of course* lifted off the ground a bit, I simply overreacted by engaging the rear brake way too quickly instead of backing off the throttle, at that point the front end compressed and in the moment it rebounded it started wobbling like crazy. Let off the bars, leaned all forward and it stopped just by the edge of asphalt, any second later and I would have been in a ditch with it. It wasn't as scary as losing traction on asphalt with new rear tire, geez how hard is it to correct when rear end tries to go sideways and then gripping sharply, jolting whole bike and rider with it left and right several times.. I have only bailed two times on bike, first time hitting a curb while parking and second time when front tire slid off in banked turn, me sliding down the road with my left leg under the bike. Ride safe!
@MotoBaumVirginia10 ай бұрын
I noticed too when you get on the gas rather hard so that it wants to pull your front wheel off the pavement. If you decide to switch a lane or two, any uneven part will barely nick your tire and make it turn left or right some that got my attention quick. Highway roads are not good for those high speeds anyway.
@dinbali4 ай бұрын
how he used the weight of his body to avoid crashing into the back of that car last second and then also avoided falling after the tank slapper is amazing
@Overhemd9 ай бұрын
Never ridden a motorbike higher than 125cc before but here's me watching all the instruction video's anyway 😂 I wanna be fully prepared for when I'm driving ~650cc in a year or so
@diggy-d8w10 ай бұрын
Very well done & this is an undereported issue that is devastating...... I don't ride but I am looking & IDKnow the reasons but I have noticed more Gixxer's doing this than other bike brands? Perhaps more of them are videoed but I've noticed a disproportional number of them happening to Suzuki bikes? Putting new bearings in the front wheel as well as weight/balancing is cheap to do & as you said, add a dampener . This is the 1st video I've seen concerning this problem.... nicely explained. peace
@RobertGonzalez-qv5dh7 ай бұрын
Great 👍 points, amongst other factors considered 🏍
@chollythecrazycorgihesinsa650510 ай бұрын
Learned a lot from your videos…Thanks man!👍
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
Of course! Glad to help
@Drobium7710 ай бұрын
In the 90s , shaking of the heed stock was a normal way of the bike telling you to back off and ride bit smoother. you got that wiggle from the handlebars and you thought "oh shit" and backed off a bit
@knuckles-338610 ай бұрын
How about just slow the f-- down!
@Drobium7710 ай бұрын
@@knuckles-3386 we did 😛
@Vk-ir6if10 ай бұрын
I was 18 on a 2 stroke kR 250 doing 140 kmh and got a wobble, went down and I thought that's it. I survived and now have great respect for bikes. Young and stupid.
@samuelfx29 ай бұрын
I suggest to you guys to have a stabilizer steering damper. Thats thing can save you from wobbling
@YernBelfus4009 ай бұрын
Tank slappers are not caused by the lack of a steering damper. Tank slappers are caused by gripping the bars too tightly. Steering dampers should never be used as a crutch for a lack of riding skill.
@Mike100019779 ай бұрын
As a new rider this was a great video for me
@Azrael600rr10 ай бұрын
Bro said Wawa and I got fucking hungry
@rollthers315710 ай бұрын
😆😀
@nateellenberger60439 ай бұрын
...Ya gotta find a better place to eat, brotha 😂😊. Wawa is only a good spot to eat for aggravating one's ulcer 😂 (Im kidding of course 😂). The Wawa's here in Va Beach are also called "kickstand ally" too (...all of us sportbike riders, here in Hampton Roads VA, always meet at Wawa 🤷🏽🏍).
@MrT-nh6di9 ай бұрын
😂
@evereq89704 ай бұрын
Language..
@NecrosisGames3 ай бұрын
Still hungry?
@davideloi91765 ай бұрын
My idea about bikes has always been that you ride/direct them with your body, not with your hands or arms. The handlebar is there so just you can have somewhere to put your hands.
@kingofhearts46610 ай бұрын
If you have an adjustable steering dampener. Remember to adjust it riding out from the gas station as you start your ride.
@jeffreybodine289710 ай бұрын
Good points all around , tire pressure is important ... I noticed some bike are worse than others though due to frame geometry I assume , my old 929 was rock solid with no steering damper , never a head shake ever ... The ninjas I have owned where suspect though , had to put a steering damper on those old girls ... Most of the new stuff they come oem
@BrianHamilton-nv5jk6 ай бұрын
‘01 Gsxr will learn ya… I will put an aftermarket stabilizer on every bike, first thing, because of my ‘01… fool me once…
@AntidoteM410 ай бұрын
I think I cheated death way too many times with my 2011 R6😅 nice video and here’s what mainly caused my speed wobbles is actually accelerating way too hard on bumpy roads, I noticed it basically never happens if I do less of that and also lean forward it actually makes a big difference I remember I n e day doing about 190 kmh and it’s it happened on the fairly good road and bro trust me I saw my self crashing it’s like I felt everything and decided not today 💯 I’m not crashing today not at this speed either 💯💯 just ease off the throttle and try to keep all your weight to the front ✅✅🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲
@ruffleschips90552 ай бұрын
Good info. Some things I hadn't considered.
@MotoTvWoodsFarm10 ай бұрын
Tank slappers are way of life and occur regularly when you push a bike to its limits. There easy to recover
@BrianHamilton-nv5jk6 ай бұрын
Recently swapped out fluid in my gpr stabilizer, put heavyweight fluid in, now it gets real stiff if need be. 👌
@graemegummow156321 күн бұрын
FYI, they were putting steering dampers on KZ900 bikes back in the mid to late 1970s.
@HORNET610 ай бұрын
Well done for saying damper instead of the recent Americanism of damp-en-er. I agree with the tyre pressure point. Absolutely critical first part of the suspension system.
@YernBelfus40010 ай бұрын
Steering dampers are not part of the suspension system, they're part of the steering system, and steering dampers should never be used as a crutch for not knowing how to ride.
@DiegoHeavyDuty4 ай бұрын
Nice buddy, very informative ✌️👍🏽
@damon123jones10 ай бұрын
add throttle , it counter to reaction but some older bikes doit
@shauns527810 ай бұрын
The grip is REALLY good advice but the best I have ever heard about grip was from Spite from SpitesCorner, formerly YammieNoob co-host. He brought it up during one of his Bottom Sprocket podcasts with Whitney and Josh and talked about the Yamaha Race School he took and the "Ice Cream grip" you want to hold your bars as if you were licking a dripping ice cream cone. So you want your hands to be closer to the bar ends as you showed but instead of being straight towards your levers you want your hands angling back towards your center tree ever so slightly. So the outside edge of your hand and palm closer to your bar ends with your fingers at a slight angle inwards. This provides the largest contact patch and closest lever reach while still maintaining a loose grip.
@satanaz9 ай бұрын
holy damn, there was a happy ending to some of those clips! scary stuff
@636ari3 ай бұрын
0:55 wtf was that randomass pause for I'm confused😂
@muricancars7976 ай бұрын
@ 9:02 dude saved his own life by being smart. I'm making my daughter watch this later (Ninja 300) and myself since I got a Hayabusa for my first bike since I joined the military. Last time I rode was Afghanistan. Forgot all about speed wobble till I saw it happen in another video.
@RAILWAY_FILMS10 ай бұрын
I feel like I know the area you are riding in !!! nice video. maybe I will spot you out there.. the wobble is terrifying.
@micheltremblay47747 ай бұрын
It happened to me in the 80's at 115 mph on a Yamaha 1100 (no damper then), I hit the rear brake slowly and loaded up the front wheel by leaning o the gas tank, it stopped wobbling soon after. That was a tip from a friend that was racing motorcycles. It's not a nice feeling specially at that speed. The wobbles were not as intense as in your clip though. Lots of good tips there.
@yepok295710 ай бұрын
Sheetz , on the east coast, also has free air pumps.
@theyetti-40456 ай бұрын
Another serious one im not sure how bad it is in the states but i see it all the time in canada, having something like a michiline front tire and a pirelli rear tire. Never mix your tires always keep a matching set. This can also cause the death wobbles as the two different tire types may be gaining different tractions as you turn, you ever notice how the wheel slightly moves back and forth in a turn kinda like a steering wheel. Thats whats happening the front tire is actually loosing traction and regaining traction due to the different treads may not seem like much but at 120km plus youll really notice it. It should be smooth. Next is long riding on tires and not contiually balancing them as the tire wears the weight changes and throws it off balance you ever notice you have a tire for 2 seasons although your changing your tires now you notice mainly on the front tire only a difference in tread wear thoughout the tire making look loke little hills instead of a smooth wear down, thats the reason for this and this can also cause the death wobbles.
@caseycoleman39410 ай бұрын
This is the first time I came across you and your channel. I am glad I saw this!!. Thank you😊😊
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
You are so welcome!
@RogueBeatsARG3 ай бұрын
Death grip is hard for people, cause they need to stay fit to get posture on the bike without resting their weight on the handles, they need to make their core strong
@OldYgg10 ай бұрын
I experienced a tak slapper once in 10 years of riding. Grooved pavement caused it. Nearly crapped my pants. In that case just slowing diwn corrected it. Bike was too old for a steering damper - just like the current bike i have.
@JeriDro10 ай бұрын
can you pop a willie if you have the wobbles to get out of it? thanks, I want a bike and I learned a lot from this
@damienmcdonald76106 ай бұрын
Bad idea trust me. If you want a bike but are inexperienced the best advice I could give is go with something 500cc or smaller for at least 6 months. It is possible that you could wheelie out of a wobble but to do that you'll need to accelerate which not only means you could crash at a faster speed but also could slip you off straight away if any of that wobble had transferred to your rear wheel. The other issue is that your weight shifts and if you can't fix it whilst in the wheelie eventually you're gonna have to land on a wobbly wheel at a now higher speed which is just an instant wipe out. But as he said don't touch that front brake, I did once in my first weeks of riding and slid down about 20 meters of road as a result. Luckily my bike only weighed 150kg and I was only doing 40mph since I took my own advice and started on a 250cc.
@nateellenberger60439 ай бұрын
Cool video and explanations mate! I appreciate these type of videos. I like that you said "wheelies are cool, but do them in parking lots because it is dangerous at high speeds/while on the interstate". You are not trying to be a drag by stating that, you are just stating a fact and most street riders should NOT be doing wheelies when others around them can also killed/harmed if something goes wrong. Good tips mate and Ill subscribe to your channel.
@CapitalCash10 ай бұрын
WOW YOU BROKE THAT DOWN better then anyone ever. That will save lives.
@nickdonalds054610 ай бұрын
Whats crazy about tire pressure is how much it fluctuates due to temperatures. So say you do a cold check in early morning/afternoon and your a few psi under. So you fill it to the proper pressure, and then by mid afternoon temperatures raise and your over pressured. I dont own a bike yet, but it seems hard to regulate tire pressures when the temperatures are always changing throughout the day
@IkaikaArnado10 ай бұрын
You put it in cold. The pressure of the bike is less than the max spec for your tire.
@malcolmwhite658810 ай бұрын
For road bikes, the pressure is calculated cold so you don’t bother checking it again hot. Most guys for trackwork will tend to check the tyres hot and that’s a different scenario because they will run tire warmers and different pressures and the bike is either parked with the tire warmers on or running full speed-so they know what the tyres should be for the grip and track surface so testing them hot. so all road use. You don’t need to worry whatever you run check them cold, depending how heavy you are and the type of bike I would experiment a little bit too. I had a GSX-R very similar to the one in the video and the factory says 36 and 40 2PSI, I think front and rear, however a very experience racer said to me run 33 and 36 and 38 to 40 with a pillion passenger and even though the bike handle really good it was an amazing difference basically because the suspension is pretty hard and he said it was much better to get a bit of suspension compliance on the road as the bike is stiff enough, and with the steering damper, damps any sort of wobble. Also check your suspension settings and ensure that you start with the recommended settings and you can buy but change the settings to see what suits the bike. The main thing to avoid Front end wobble is to avoid having the bike to firm and high in the rear, and too soft in the front. Also grip the bars firm but relaxed and should the bike wobble. Don’t do anything Sudden don’t be tempted to brake- steady throttle and on many bikes will stop the wobble with gentle acceleration. Also frequently if you’re Weight is too far back, it will tend to make the front end skitterish. I had an early GSX-R1100(oh and by the way the video guy is not correct to say that 2005 was the earliest the dampers were standard on bikes most sports Suzukis, the original GSX-R’s- both 750 and 1100 had them from 1985! ) anyway that bike was imported from the USA, where it was entered in production racing but in New Zealand, whether it was the type of roads or what it was really fussy on tyres and suspension it got to the point where it tank slapped that much I just used to shift my weight hold on and keep the throttle open and it just used to right it self😂
@Schmitzelhaus6 ай бұрын
2003 R1 here without steering damper. I religiously check tire pressures AT LEAST every 2nd gas stop and always at the same stationary compressor (don´t use those mobile, carry around ones on many gas stations), but still it can happen sometimes, especially on bumpy streets. Haven´t had one as bad as some shown here (like, JESUS CHRIST, what are you doing?!) but when it happens, immediately loosen the grip on my right hand to let the gas go always worked for me. Since the bike already rapidly slows down from just that, the weight of the bike and you on top will automatically transfer to the front and help self-stabilising the front tire.
@dillonweaver230710 ай бұрын
Damper can make the wheel harder to turn if that’s how you want it. If you don’t want immediate feedback in a particular direction
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
I’m referring to a built in steering damper. They adjust on their on own, as u speed up it tightens up the steering. When ur not moving it should be smooth and easy to turn.
@noxious891239 ай бұрын
@@SpunkyBoyy A normal mechanical steering damper doesn't "adjust" in use at all, its just that a more violent input will produce more resistance. That's just how it is when the piston is trying to push oil through a fixed size orifice. Unless you have an electronically adjusted damper like Honda's HESD, where it's actually adjusting the damping relative to your speed, just like if you were to turn the adjuster nob on your mechanical damper.
@marcianoresoort10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips. Good explanation
@Patriot233210 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, I needed this information
@epytomeproductionz75717 ай бұрын
Idk how big of a franchise royal farms is, but here in Maryland, yeah air is free at rofo too... but they're broken most of the time
@stevenleek125410 ай бұрын
This is the BEST tutorial!
@johnhartley302210 ай бұрын
My concourse 14 handles very noticeably different if tire pressure is off even a couple psi, turns into a pig. I had a death wobble on my suzuki wes cooley. Mismatched tires were the cause i think. Suspension settings might have had an impact. Came on slow about 105, full wobble 110. Repeatable. Dampner, new tires, rebuild forks. Amazing how terror motivates maintenance
@monokheros537310 ай бұрын
five and a half minutes to get to the PRIMARY REASONS FOR DEATH WOBBLE yup Mechanical errors can and occasionally do give death wobbles OPERATOR ERROR is the number one reason for death wobbles on PAVEMENT gravel and dirt tends to be gully n washes front wheel coming in contact with ground when not inline with direction of travel
@rolandgeorges9608 ай бұрын
This is the best comment and is totally correct. I analyzed my death wobble: I hit a bump at 90mph. My front wheel came a bit up and was not back straight on the tarmac. My rear wheel also hit the bump, and the bike was not in line anymore. I saved the day; I was just very lucky.
@Dicemann5554 ай бұрын
Thanks man! Super informative!
@DavidSmith-wy5rb3 ай бұрын
Great advice Erin !
@9011combo9 ай бұрын
So what is the proper tire pressure for sport bike? Love your video!
@nateellenberger60439 ай бұрын
OoOooO, one more thing mates. @ 9:00, you go over proper "grip". Would you say that its best to loosen your grip, and hold on to your bike with your knees (not with your arms)? Our arms/hands are mostly to used just to handle the "controls" (not the steering) on the bike. To actually stablize yourself on the bike, use your knees and not youe arms/hands. The inside of your knees should be a lil' sore the next day from squeezing the tank so much (stablizing yourself on the bike) from the previous day's ride 😉. Does that work for us for an explanation (....maybe not 🤷🏽😂🤦)?
@AGRIV8TD196310 ай бұрын
Proper tire pressure, and rear tire alignment.
@mauricegimmy96968 ай бұрын
Took my bike out of winter hibernation last month and went straight to Wawa to air up my tires to specifications
@superiortechairrefrigerati897910 ай бұрын
You’re a blessing thank you.
@splinter280410 ай бұрын
Thanks for these tips bro
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
You bet💯
@MarkMillions-i3k10 ай бұрын
Lol driving bikes that "death wobble" on the street, made my day, I'm laughing so hard right now.
@saulortiz697210 ай бұрын
Appreciate u an your videos bro,keep em coming 💪
@SpunkyBoyy10 ай бұрын
Will do! Thanks💯🤘🏻
@alanchase732910 ай бұрын
Wheel balance can cause issues as well.
@Daves_Man_Cave10 ай бұрын
Yup, set your tire pressures correctly, which means for that tire, NOT what is in the manual or on the swingarm, unless you are running the OEM tires... Once you deviate from the tires the bike shipped with, whatever is in the manual is no longer applicable. Call Dunlop or Pirelli or whatever you switch to and get what they recommend for that application. A general pressure you can start with is 34F and 36R cold on the street. Also, never run max pressures. The tire doesn't heat up by weaving back and forth... it heats up by the carcass flexing, and if the pressure it too high, it doesn't flex and it takes forever to get hot... After that, set the suspension up correctly and get a steering damper... The chances of a wobble with all off that done is very unlikely...
@SamDuh708 ай бұрын
I dont ride a bike , yet… but i hope this will help me when i get my license next year tysm
@chicagoui92999 ай бұрын
I had one death wobble. It was on my 1990 yammy radian 600 at top speed. This man is correct 100%. I had a loose grip and that saved my damn life. Plus I had to buy a new pair of riding pants. 😬 ooops