The SOHC/4 World Tour is in under way.
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Yep, the bearings should be "set" to 40 in-lbs, then backed off 1/4 turn, then snugged back down. After about 1000 miles, you will need to repeat, as the races will settle a bit into the steering head. Then it will stay in tune, for like 40k miles.
If the head bearings adjustment does not fix it, loosen up the front fork and tighten it again. Top bracket, bottom bracket, wheel axle. I always tighten the axle first, bottom bracket second and the top bracket last since the top bracket is weakest. Are your fork tubes straight?
I leave the front wheel on the ground with the bike on centre stand. Are you really bear from Croatia?
Quote from: HondaMan on May 07, 2014, 10:48:34 PMYep, the bearings should be "set" to 40 in-lbs, then backed off 1/4 turn, then snugged back down. After about 1000 miles, you will need to repeat, as the races will settle a bit into the steering head. Then it will stay in tune, for like 40k miles.Curious, is there a special torque wrench for a spanner to get it to 40 in-lbs, or is this just based off of years and years of "feel"?
Quote from: mcswny on May 08, 2014, 09:39:37 AMQuote from: HondaMan on May 07, 2014, 10:48:34 PMYep, the bearings should be "set" to 40 in-lbs, then backed off 1/4 turn, then snugged back down. After about 1000 miles, you will need to repeat, as the races will settle a bit into the steering head. Then it will stay in tune, for like 40k miles.Curious, is there a special torque wrench for a spanner to get it to 40 in-lbs, or is this just based off of years and years of "feel"?With all [new] tapered bearings, you can get very close with their "feel". As you tighten them, move them back & forth about 10-30 degrees, and there will be a point where they suddenly increase in friction. This is the torque where the sheet metal cage just distorted itself to align all the rollers it has, at once: then back off from this point, and then snug back down to where friction just starts again (on new ones). The first friction point is around 35-50 in-lbs for this "set", the latter is the point where the full length of the rollers just contacts the full face of the races.After an initial run-in period (like on car wheels), the surfaces irregularities of the rollers and races wear away to smooth. This is when you should go back in and re-torque to the second torque, where drag can slightly be felt. If this is done correctly, the typical tapered bearing will last for thousands upon thousands of hours of movement. Since it takes about 1000 hours of run time to wear out a typical SOHC4 engine, the bearings will usually beat that.