CropdusterDoug
Member
Sounds like rear wheel steering caused by rear wheel alignment or engine/transmission rubber mounts being worn & too soft. Perfect rear wheel alignment along with correct axle shims so NO wheel offset exists between front and rear. That is a Must. Perfect rear wheel alignment in relationship to the front wheel is a Must (florescent light tube trick). Add a True-Trac 3 point stabilizer and I would bet you can say good-by to that wobble happening again.
These are the "big hitters" I would absolutely check. There are also a bunch of other secondary reasons how/why that can happen.
I'm thinking that looseness in the swing arm could contribute to the progression of the wobble. On my last bike, a 1991 Goldwing (sorry I have to mention a rice burner!) there was a square chunk of metal weight attached between the forks to prevent wobble. The only time I had a wobble with that bike was when I clipped a plastic traffic marker (one of those red drum type things) that some jerk put in the middle of a highway curve not seen in the darkness. All I did was pull back as hard as I could to stop the handle bars from doing their dance. For a Harley to wobble, I can only think of looseness in the steering head, the wheel bearings, or the swing arm to cause it....unless, of course, you clip something with the handle bars.