Mutley
Registered user
Must be doing something wrong, found myself doing 100 on the M5 because I wasn't concentrating yesterday. It was deafening and the steering was a little vague but other than that it was fine 



Mine does that too.... based on my research its a standard feature of the 1340 after a "high" speed run...
My Glide is rock solid till about 75.... then as the Batwing starts to try and fly it all gets a bit "difficult".....Also, i cant hear the Radio above 70.... so i just sit back and enjoy the view.....
Mine tooThey all do that sir.
It used to be a lot worse if you thrashed them from cold before the barrels etc. had chance to expand.

... nicely with what I was told; start it, leave it for 10 mins to warm up and expand, and then ride it![]()

I took it up to 80mph the other day but it wasn't a pleasant experience and now have a bubbling rear base gasket![]()

Did you buy the wrong one Rob
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Thanks Phil,
I've sent true track an email, they do a complete kit for my bike, its not cheap but worth the effort.
I was looking into making my own linkage but to be honest I'm trying not to get into too much spanner work. I'd sooner just fit a kit and ride the bike. The whole point if buying the Harley was to be able to just ride it.
So far the to do list is:-
Front wheel bearings
Front engine mount
Either true track swinging arm kit or just new swinging arm bearings.
Sort out the steering lock
Not too bad for a 23 year old bike.
It's hard finding out what the differences are between the years and models though. I'd have expected more info than there is on the Internet. The dealers aren't too helpful. I'm getting used to hearing "it's obsolete" I guess that's why so many get broken, always wondered where all the early evos had gone.
have a look at the rear engine rubber mounts, when they go it wallows like a pig, they are easy to replace and cheap.
Apoligies if this has been posted before, but this site enables you to find the partnumber via Microfiche style look ups.
http://www.shopronniesharleydavidson.com/OEMpartfinder.htm