I have a 2020 F3 basic with Vredestein Quatrac 5 tires on the front. When I had them balanced, technician tried to get it right with his balancer, but I question the trueness? I put American Seal in them and have a slight vibration when you let the handle bars go? My question is, if I can find a local dealer with a better balancer, can i balance them with sealer still in them or do I have to break them down and remove the sealer for a better balance? Thanks for any advice!
Do you still get that 'slight vibration' after ryding for 30 mins or so?? :dontknow: While many manufacturer's blurbs will tell you that their particular sealant/balancing product won't migrate to the bottom of the tire while the vehicle is parked, if the sealant/balancer remains 'fluid' enough to actually work as a sealany &/or tire balancer at any level, then the 'fluid'
WILL migrate to some extent and that will often mean you get a (hopefully minor) vibration for maybe as long as 30 minutes or so after starting to ride....
You can spend a lot of money on fluids & beads & other crap that goes inside your tires to supposedly 'perfectly balance' them &/or seal them in the event of a puncture, but if these products can actually
DO the job of balancing or sealing your tires while your tires are rotating, then the product
NEEDS to be able to move or flow to achieve that, even if it does move sloooowly, and that means you
WILL get some degree of imbalance after parking for a while - even those externally mounted bolt on Centramatic products that Lamonster sells/CopperSpyder linked above, which are one of the better if not actually
the best 'continually balancing' products on the market today, even
they will leave you with a
short period of 'less than ideal balance' after parking up for a while, but at least with them it's usually only for moments after starting to ride, not minutes!! :shocked:
So, bearing all that in mind, any subsequent mechanical balancing done with sealant/balancing fluid still inside the tire must be done
AFTER the tire has been rotating at speed for about 30 minutes or so & reached its operating temp, or you'll just be 'balancing' an incorrectly balanced tire to start with, perpetuating the 'imbalance' if not actually making it worse,
AND that 'incorrect balance' will still continue to vary every time you park the vehicle as the sealant/balancing fluid slooowly pools in a different place.... All of which adds up to
anything remaining
inside the tire being an
absofreakinlutely pain in the butt if you
really want a 'well balanced' wheel, even with the most sensitive of moden balancing equipment! :gaah:
You
might get reasonably close to achieving a 'well balanced' wheel with any stuff remaining inside your tires; but it does tend to become a bit of an exercise in chasing a white rabbit down a hole expecting to find a tea party...

and you'll
almost always get a whole lot closer with a quality tire (like the Vredesteiens) being balanced by a competent & skilled balancing technician working on/with modern balancing equipment and with
NO stuff inside your tires! If you still feel a vibration after having a skilled tech do their thing on modern gear & them being sure the tire/rim assy is as near to being a 'correctly balanced' wheel as they can get it, then there
might be an issue with the manufacture of tire &/or rim itself, but the tech should be able to identify that; or it could well be something like a dodgy suspension &/or driveline component that's either failed or is failing & causing the vibration..... If you are happy that the tech was competent & skilled in their job & they were using modern machinery, then maybe consider the Centramatics to iron out any residual imbalance &/or any changes in balance as the tire wears, but for
my two bob's worth, if a good tire balancing tech using modern gear says the Vredestein is balanced well & the wheel assy is not the cause, yet you are still getting vibrations, then you've got another problem somewhere and I'd seriously be looking elsewhere for issues!! :lecturef_smilie:
Ps: Have you swapped out the rear tire to something other than a Kenda yet?? :dontknow: If not, that could be a good place to start!
