Jean wrote:ME109, IF you were riding alone with that tall load, how would it feel?
On the R100s with s faring, I've experimented with load arrangement and found if I pack for solo riding with some stuff close behind me, and distributed to the rear, things are pretty stable. IF I leave seat room for a non-existent passenger, weird things happen over 50 mph. (unpleasant weird things!) RSs are probably a lot more forgiving due to the aero-designed faring.
Another way to say this is I've never seen an airhead RT on the autobahn.
Gidday Jean!
You may have something in regard to the RS fairing, and then maybe not.
One up, two up, it doesn't matter.
I can be loaded like that for a solo outback trip..........and sit on the pillion seat @ 70 mph.
I believe that a snowflake seriously stabilizes the front end once sufficient speed is reached.
I have experimented many times with inducing head shakes at speeds below say 40 mph. At those lower speeds it is easy to get things loose, so to speak.
At above 50 and beyond, things become very solid.
What I have noticed is that the weight of a pillion or touring gear stabilizes the rear end because the 'weight' can't shift side to side quickly enough, effectively dampening any wobbles.
The thing I've found that most destabilizes my RS is worn tyres, particularly the rear as it flattens off. The flattening off varies from brand to brand and of course riding style. The rear tyre I found that kept its rounded profile the best, was by far The Michellin Mac 50. I could wear those Macs out without them flattening off.
The worst I found was a BT45. Flattened off well before it was worn out.
The more our tyres wear, the more effect road irregularities and road grooves etc will have in the way of handlebar wobbles.
When my RS gets two new tyres at the same time, the handlebar instability is non existent. Tested over road surfaces that I know from experience would produce wobbles with worn tyres. Unbroken white lines on the highway are classic wobble inducers. New tyres, no wobbles.
One up touring.
Two up touring.
