
Wheels.
Wheelie is right. But there is such a thing as parallax error. It's a most visual mistake.
As the man says take the tank off & seat maybe, then using a stringline and some heavy weights to hold the strings. Place the string around the front wheel at rim level on either side so as the two pieces of the string go back on either side of the rear wheel.
Now center the front wheel and check for the string to be alongside both sides of the front tire and clamp the string to the front tread.
When the string is pulled tight at the rear the gap should be zero on both sides of the tire.
If for instance the front wheel is twisted one way or the other a gap will emerge from the string near both front and rear tires. It is imperative that the front wheel is centered (Steering lock work?) Check the rear tire again to see if the string is bias to either side.Adjust.
The objective is to make sure that the drive sprocket and the rear wheel sprocket are aligned via the chain. This will then assume that the frame is straight and that the engine is aligned as it should have been on installation.,
Some times I get a piece of wood doweling 10" long, and put it in between the rear spokes, feet on rear foot pegs,pull the whole rear wheel assembally and use it as a unbias handle to pull the rear wheel tight regardless of the tightness of the chain. Wife comes in handy as 2IC of axle spanner!
Spin the wheel to give indication of freewheeling with out binding of chain.IF it works the use the axle adjusters to fine tune the position. Make sure that the wheel will rotate easily and with out being to tight on the chain.Tighten the axle nut temporarily untill your satisified that the wheel is not being bias to either side.
I had a loose rear wheel sprocket recently,(All four nuts) it gave a very bad indication of the rear wheel being out of aglinment and the engine about to explode.
If all fails go 50/50 the call a friend
Dave