Front end has gone vague
Front end has gone vague
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Discussion

cliffords

Original Poster:

3,716 posts

47 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I have an 1190 Adventure , its 9 years old but in very good shape , I have had it for three years .
It has 20k miles, an MOT one month ago, no advisories, and the tyres are 1000 miles old, Scorpion Trail 2.

The bike has always had a very sure feeling front end , giving complete confidence and I have never doubted it , until now . It has without warning lost its feeling and doesn't feel planted anymore .

I went over the bike yesterday and again today , wheel bearings fine , chain absolutely spot on , front forks true , the paint marks I put on the bolts showing they have not moved . Brakes fine and tyre pressure absolutely accurate to where I keep them for the past three years of ownership . Wheels track true. Steering damper smooth .
Spokes fine , no notchy head stock, and I cycled the suspension today from firm /soft /hard and single rider/ two up etc , then back to where I always ride it .

Its just lost confidence in the front end without any intervention from me . It was great last week, I went out yesterday and today and its wrong . It lives in my garage , so no interference .
No dropped bike , no potholes .

Any thoughts appreciated .

HybridTheory

640 posts

56 months

Tuesday
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Could it be all in your head now ! Like telling yourself you must fall asleep but then you can't

Bodo

12,514 posts

290 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
When did you have the fork oil replaced last time?

link said:
What are the warning signs that your suspension needs service now?

[...]

Pay attention to how your adventure bike handles. If it feels vague in corners or dives excessively under braking, your fork oil has likely broken down. A rear end that bounces repeatedly after hitting bumps or feels harsh over small irregularities suggests your shock needs attention. These handling changes often develop gradually, so you might not notice until the problem becomes significant.

[...]

Inconsistent behaviour is another warning sign. If your suspension feels different from one day to the next, or one fork leg seems to move differently than the other, something is wrong internally. This might indicate uneven oil levels, worn bushings, or damaged internal components. Don’t ignore these symptoms, as they typically worsen quickly and can affect your safety.

[...]
https://tfxsuspension.com/blog/adventure-motor-bike/how-often-should-adventure-bike-suspension-be-serviced/

cliffords

Original Poster:

3,716 posts

47 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
To answer both points.
I understand it can get in your head, it is now . I was riding a known stretch to me today,back and forward with different settings trying to get it to feel how it used to . This has just happened all of a sudden and it's definitely different.

For the fork oil they are WP semi active. I don't expect it's ever been changed. I will have to find some videos. It doesn't look straight forward.

Again though it was fine last Thursday on a ride . Not good at all on the Saturday.

MrGman

1,659 posts

230 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Have you checked the headstock bearings?

I had a 1090 and they’re known for coming loose, I had to tighten mine a couple of times, my description would be lack of feel in the front end from that.

airsafari87

3,237 posts

206 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Was it particularly colder than when you normally ride?

Some tyres can feel vague and unpredictable below certain temps (I’m thinking Supercorsa’s below 10 degrees here) until they get a bit of heat into them.

trickywoo

13,744 posts

254 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I’d be looking at the headstock. Even though you say it’s not notchy it could be too loose.

Re the fork oil in the wp semi active it doesn’t do much as the cartridges do all the work.

Changing the oil if you wish couldn’t be easier. It’a just a case of taking the forks out of the bike. The caps come off with the cartridge attached so you don’t even need to worry about compressing the spring. You do of course need to undo the bottom bolt in the fork.


gareth h

4,208 posts

254 months

Tuesday
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Was it your first ride of the year? I always feel that everything is a bit strange until my 3rd or 4th ride of the year.

Peter T

156 posts

264 months

Tuesday
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A fork service for sure, oil degrades due to cavitation and contains particles of bearing wear. Also breaks down it's viscosity over time. I had a broken fork spring which suddenly changed the front end of my bike overnight, so a strip and service is a good starting point.

trickywoo

13,744 posts

254 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Peter T said:
A fork service for sure, oil degrades due to cavitation and contains particles of bearing wear. Also breaks down it's viscosity over time. I had a broken fork spring which suddenly changed the front end of my bike overnight, so a strip and service is a good starting point.
That’s generally good advice but Op has WP semi active so it’s not the same as conventional spring and valve forks.

Besides, he says it was fine one day but not the next. Could be a major suspension fault I suppose caused by something breaking but I’d have thought that would be more obvious.

RustyNissanPrairie

559 posts

19 months

Tuesday
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Pull the forks for servicing, drop the yokes/triple clamps and check/grease/replace the bottom headset bearing.

Steve Bass

10,641 posts

257 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
S or R model??

If it's the S, check the electronic suspension is functioning correctly.

Greenbot35

217 posts

117 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
If everything else checked out, it might be worth changing the fork bushings and oil. It doesn't take much movement to affect things. It could be slight drag when leaning over this will be much more pronounced

cliffords

Original Poster:

3,716 posts

47 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
OP here thanks for all the suggestions. Bike is now in many bits in the garage and I have to say I have found no broken or worn components yet .
I will come back and update over the next days , may be a few days.


Again appreciate the comments and I will update in time.

Edited by cliffords on Tuesday 14th April 22:42

cliffords

Original Poster:

3,716 posts

47 months

Yesterday (12:24)
quotequote all
Well I don't know how but its fixed , I changed a lot of things all at once so I will never know I guess. Been out 40 miles just now and its perfect again the very good front end is fully back . I have a much bigger ride tomorrow with a pall so I wanted to test it out today .

I had the forks off the bike and everything that entails . I put it all back together carefully checking and checking every bolt to the correct torque etc.
The only adjustment I made was barely a quarter of a turn on the headstock bearings . They were not loose , not clicking, no knocking , I just did it whilst it was all apart and checked I still had good steering movement without the damper on.

Its just better now cured , I found nothing broken and nothing loose as I disassembled .

Caddyshack

14,142 posts

230 months

Yesterday (12:29)
quotequote all
Tyre may be only 1000 miles old but what is the date stamp on it. Often they are old before they are put on and may have just gone hard?

Benni

3,689 posts

235 months

Quarter of a turn is not much, but that is likely the difference between "confident" and "vague".
Good work undoing everything that surrounds / is mounted to the fork,
the feeling of "just right, not too tight" in turning/checking the forks is compromised by hoses, cables and wires.
Have a good and safe trip !

archie456

507 posts

246 months

Benni said:
Quarter of a turn is not much, but that is likely the difference between "confident" and "vague".
Good work undoing everything that surrounds / is mounted to the fork,
the feeling of "just right, not too tight" in turning/checking the forks is compromised by hoses, cables and wires.
Have a good and safe trip !
My 1290GT needs to be slackened off then tightened to 18Nm, it might be worth checking the handbook for the correct figure.

NITO

1,310 posts

230 months

Could it have been a loose electrical connection? Or something else electronic, low voltage or anything like that. You mention semi active. A sudden change doesn't sound like anything mechanical.

Freakuk

4,449 posts

175 months

I started to get a small clunking feeling on my 1290 SDR after about 1 year of ownership, I thought it was forks or a wheel bearing, but with a bit of fault finding it was the headstock, no idea how it could work loose, maybe KTM don't torque them enough from the factory... who knows, but it was the slightest of adjustment to sort the problem.

Could have been anything as you say, glad it's sorted.