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Severe Front end wobble while braking at slow speed - anyone else? Any thoughts?

The strangest thing happened the other day. My wife was riding the 2015 F3 and suddenly the bike has a severe uncontrollable wobble while braking, but only just before the bike came to a stop. I immediately did a test ride and reproduced the issue several times. This was occurring in straight line braking and the bike shifted left and right at less than 10 mph until stopped. So we cancelled the rest of the ride and rode about 5 miles to our home. Oddly enough, the issue self resolved by the time we got home. At the last service, about 1000 miles ago, the front brake pads were worn and were scheduled to be replaced at the next service. My mechanic said they were still within spec. I will replace both rotors and pads. Has this happened to anyone? Any thoughts?
 
If you have not put the pads and rotors on, I would bet that when you do it will all go away. The old pads and rotors will sometimes glaze over and get hard spots, that's most likely what you're going through. But after you do the work make sure after a good ride you retorque your lug nuts.
 
It shifted left and right, but only below 10MPH, and then fixed itself? Rotors get blamed for everything. And then you actually check them and find out they are ok. I'd visit the front wheel mounting and retorque them right now, before I worried about rotors. And check the lower ball joints and tie rod ends for good measure. Sounds like an old-fashion shimmy. But then, I'm old fashion.
 
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I am thinking that if it was worn steering components, it probably would not resolve and probably would not have come on so acutely. But I will check that out for sure. Thanks.
Generally true. But steering can be a 'Threshold' system. Works fine up until it gets just past the point where, under certain stress, it starts to give issues. Or, a single pothole, etc, can create an instant problem.

Tires/Wheels
Tire cord separation. Probably not because it should give you other signs. But possible.
Tire balance. Has one or both tires thrown weights? Are they cupping or showing uneven wear?
Air pressure (which you've already eliminated).
Bent wheel. This takes a very big impact. Like a pothole that would do damage, not something that you wouldn't notice at the time.

Brakes
A caliper or pad hanging up. Check for uneven pad wear. This can be a good indication if it has been going on for a while.
Spin the wheel and look for any intermittent binding on the rotor. This can indicate a warped or damaged rotor. A Dial Indicator or Runout Gauge is very handy for this if you have one. This will give you an exact measurement on the amount of variation. Some is allowed.

Steering Components
Lift a wheel. With the handlebars secured (ratchet straps, someone holding them, etc.), grab the wheel front and back and move it left to right. Do this for both sides. Look, listen, and feel for any unwanted movement.
I doubt that it is your steering 'DPS' unit.
Check handlebar play. The universal joint can wear (not uncommon). If your handlebars move very far without resistance, this is a definite indication. A sloppy universal joint combined with other front end issues can also give you the symptoms you are experiencing.
 
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