Sorry to hear of your vibe woes.
It's such an individual thing vibies it seems.
For me it's the high frequency 4 cylinder stuff that got to me and made me hands go dead after a long ride, ditto modernish parallel twins and even the fabled, super smooth triples.
The CBR 600 was super smooth but I couldn't live with the riding position. Yamaha 600 Diversion cheap but nasty and very rough. Got rid of after 4 months. MZ 250 surprisingly good. That rubber engine mount that allows the engine to rock on its rear mount really does work. But it's otherwise a miserable thing to ride any distance.
Back in my young days the only smooth bike was a Kawasaki Z400 twin. The balance shafts worked though it was otherwise pretty dull. Honda XL250 obviously vibrated and Triton 500 was like a jack hammer. RS 250 that did have balance shafts was ok. As was the 400 Superdream (when it wasn't broken down).
More modern Boxers have been a delight from that point of view to me at least, the duff duff duff at low revs is fine, mine at least have been smooth as butter in what I'd call the practical riding rev range although if you rag 'em (to no great speed advantage mind) they can be rougher and tingly but frankly who buys an oilhead boxer twin and revs it without mercy, what would be the point?
After I got over the new bike rush, the low down power was really disappointing in OEM trim. But with power commander the low speed duff duff is great and the harsh vibes and lack pf power in the 4K to 5K flat spot are much better. Up to 70 it's very smooth but keep up with motorway traffic and it's into that uncomfortable range.
Apologies if it's been asked before but what bikes don't or haven't given you the problem? Given that sensitivities and underlying conditions, occasionally caused by many years of other occupational related activity, or just bike riding in general, can excacerbate any physical sensitivities.
My previous bike was a 900 Yamaha Diversion. The 2x rpm tingle was terrible. I couldn't afford to get rid so tried Rox anti vibe risers and they did a great job. The problem on that (and most Japanese bikes) is the awful screen. Wind blast and turbulence builds the anterior neck and pecs leading to TOS. The BMW with Givi AF330 screen has solved that.
Has anyone else had a go and pronounced it unusually vibey?
Others have no comments. My brother has a similar model which feels tight whereas mine spins. Mine does buzz a bit more but its not enough for him to complain. [/quote]
You appear to be extremely sensitive to this type of vibration for reasons so far unknown or have some mechanical issue(s).
There is some arthritic change (early stages began in late 1990s. Noticed after a heavy weights gym session. The old TOS (aggravated by the Yam 900) has pretty much gone and that's different symptoms.
Frankly, I think pissing around with the handle bars will do little, if any good.
I used the bike without any bar end weights and vibration was more spiky. I was hoping more bar end weight could be better still. So far, it's not.
The exercise has involved some pissing about but really no great loss.
For what it will cost, I will cast lead into the new weights but don't expect anything much.
Sent somehow.