My dear friend Roland Oliynyk, STOC 893, had a custom installed adjustable Scott’s steering damper on his Canadian ‘98 ST1100 [in that nice green colo(u)r]. It looked good and he said it it worked well.
John
You know, I’ve often wondered if aftermarket screens cause issue. This bike has a 22” rifle screen.I know you don't want to hear this, but it's probably your tyres. There was a recent post that went on for a millenia before guess what, it was the tyres.
Having said that, there are good ones and bad ones and luckily mine is a good one, more by luck than judgement probably. I don't adjust my head bearings weekly or take the calipers apart after every ride or mess about with diffent screens. It's just a STeady old girl at all speeds and the only difference without a pillion is the back end feels like a pogo stick. For the small amount of time it's got one on board I preserve my knuckles and leave it alone. For a prolonged journey I would adjust it to softer damping and springing. And then apply bandages.
IMO I would throw the price of a seering damper at two new tyres, no I'm not going to say which ones. You only fall for that once. If all you're getting is a little wobble at low speeds, ride them out and change then.
The damper is not needed and probably a pain in the arris to sort out.
Just my two'penneth.
Upt'North.
But yes John, the Green is lovely.
Hi Ray, it appears you missed the part in the OPs final few posts in which he clearly stated that there was some remaining headshake, but he was just going to live with it. The tire was somewhat out of round, and was the primary suspect all along, but that defect amplified his underlying steering stem issues. Those issues may be minor, but they're there.I know you don't want to hear this, but it's probably your tyres. There was a recent post that went on for a millenia before guess what, it was the tyres.
Agreed. When I replaced mine on my 1100 I had to experiment several times with test rides to get the exact setting that removed the headshake without causing too much steering friction. I was not concerned with meeting some arbitrary pull force spec, I knew when I had it right by feel and lack of headshake, that's all that matters. You can't determine if its at that point with any external measurement, it either shakes or it doesn't, simple as that.The point I want to stress is how the preload has a narrow window and I cant imagine most people being able to tell if it is right by feel.
I imagine they could, mine is a MRA Vario two piece jobby.You know, I’ve often wondered if aftermarket screens cause issue. This bike has a 22” rifle screen.
You could of course take it off and go for a spin and see what happens. Be an interesting exercise. It'll definitely be drafty.You know, I’ve often wondered if aftermarket screens cause issue. This bike has a 22” rifle screen.
Roland hasn’t ridden for a number of years now due to health issues. I recall that he indeed tried the steering damper to address the decel wobble issue. Roland has an innate inclination to tinker and experiment with lots of things in many many areas; quite inventive. At the time, I believe he wasn’t overly concerned about the wobble; frankly, I think he did it just to see if it could be done on an ST1100. It was an elegant install with a frame-welded pin and the control mounted centered between and just above the handlebars/triple tree. It looked factory.what effect was he trying create or issue was he trying to fix?
The whole “decel wobble” with both hands off the handlebars issue/worry is just silly in my opinion. If the ST handles well otherwise, and just placing a finger on a bar stops the wobble — you have a non-problem; leave one hand on a bar for those few seconds!
I recall that he indeed tried the steering damper to address the decel wobble issue. Roland has an innate inclination to tinker and experiment with lots of things in many many areas; quite inventive.
As a first step the OP could adjust the stock steering stem bearings and see if that provides any improvement.
IMO I would throw the price of a seering damper at two new tyres, no I'm not going to say which ones. You only fall for that once.