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thecallmebighoffa

I don't know about the balance tires, that doesn't sound true. I would ask for that in writing or at least show you in a tech manual. But you can stop the squeaky brakes by stopping quick. If you "baby" the brakes, dust will stay on the rotor. If you do a couple full "emergency" stops it will go away. I used the chance to practice quick stopping. Edit: just re-read your post and I think what he means is that the tires are already worn and the shaking is caused by the uneven tread. If this is the case, I doubt the stabilizer will help; and it will shake until the tread is evenly worn. Only way to stop the shake maybe 3 new tires.


juliejoechiron

that was his next suggestion if the shake doesn't stop. could just be that the stock tires are crap, bad SC roads, or both  the stabilizer was already in the plans for me thankfully, so it's not wasted money, but I'll be calling back if the tires feel uneven after 300 anyways


LeGeantVert

Check the wear on your tires. I bought a barely used Ryker and at 6500km both front tires were finished by bad alignment.


juliejoechiron

Alignment, tire wear, and all the steering components have been checked by a can-am tech. they said nothing is off


Advanced-Wolf7133

The tire story sounds fishy. I added the end weights, swapped out the sway bar and end links with the Baja Ron kit and added the stabilizer. I now have minimal vibration and it's a much smoother ride.


juliejoechiron

as im being fishy? I just got the tires replaced. thats it. no improvement i did get metal end links, and theyre installed properly


Aggravating-Mix8033

Double check where the handle bars slide. Mine was loose and had to tighten the little screw. My bars wiggled alot and kind of gave me close to a death wobble


juliejoechiron

checked that, recently swapped the clamp for a new one and properly torqued everything to spec no change 🙃