New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
People have been trying to use rubber washers on motor mounts on bikes to damp vibrations for 70 years, and I've never heard from anyone that it's worked yet.An engineered system like on a Yamaha RD400 or a Norton Commando or a late Sportster is different. But if the cheap solution worked, the maker would probably have spent an extra $.75 per bike and done it from the get-go.Lannis
Try filling the handlebars with lead shot or BBs
I have no idea if this works but they have been around for some time:http://www.barsnake.com
Interesting idea...I've got the super heavy Throttlemeister bar ends, wouldn't filling the handlebars (assuming it's hollow) make the steering heavy for maneuvering?
Even though my beemer with the 180 degree V that is in perfect balance :-)
If you ever rode a British twin you will never complain about Guzzi vibes.
My Norge is nothing special and I can almost always read the number plate of a following vehicle.
Has anyone here experimented with placing a thin but hard rubber grommet or washer on the mounting bolts between the frame and the engine on a 2V Norge? I'm curious whether that would make the bike any smoother at higher revs and / or would it create any alignment issue with the CARC drive if say the washer was 1/8" thick?The bike runs great, but there's a slight buzz above 75 mph in top gear that I would love to eliminate, and it's not valves, TPS or Throttle bodies as I've done those multiple times down to the finest level of tuning possible with Guzzidiag. It's not annoying, I'd just love for it to be as smooth above 4k RPM's as it is below 4K or find whatever else it could be that creates that buzz...mind you, it's not enough to put my hand to sleep or anything.