Frankenduck,
Thanks for your response. in your experience, my problem HAS to be with the tires or the steering head bearings?
What radials are available for the K75S? I have only used bias ply in my 72000 miles, 26 years, of owning this bike and have not had this issue before.
Radial tire info here:
http://bit.ly/new2kbikes (I don't mean to imply that radials will solve this issue. You shouldn't have wobble issues with bias ply tires either. I just mention that because K75s and K100s ride tons better on radials.)
IN MY EXPERIENCE, I've only had one tire that wobbled similar to yours (when the bike got up to about 30 MPH.) That one turned out to be tire treads that had worn poorly because the issue went away with installation of a new tire. I've also had low speed wobbles that were caused by loose/worn steering head bearings.
I also had very low speed wobble issues putting a K1100 front end on a K75. Since the steering stem of the K1100 forks has a narrower diameter than that of K75 forks the fluid-bloc steering damper inside of the K75 steering head is taken out of the picture. With bias ply tires the front end would wobble a bit at stop-n-go traffic speeds. When I swapped in radial tires that wobble went away.
Not sure if this will help but here's how I install forks:
a) Insert them into fork trees at the same height and torque fork tree pinch bolts.
b) Install the fork brace but
leave the four bolts for the fork brace a tad loose.
c) Install the front wheel (and brake calipers), leaving the axle pinch bolts and axle end bolt loose. (Like the rider manual says.)
d) Get on the center-standed bike and jump the front end up and down a few times to get the alignment of things "settled." (With the front brake applied so that you don't accidentally rock the bike off of the center stand.)
e) Torque the axle end bolt, then pinch bolts.
f) THEN torque the bolts for the fork brace.
My theory in doing things in this order is that if you tighten the fork brace bolts too early then you can introduce pre-stresses in the front end. By tightening those last you shouldn't have that issue.
One thing I would try in your current situation is to loosen the fork brace bolts, axle pinch bolts and axle end bolt. Get on the bike and jump the front end up and down a few times. Then retorque the bolts in the following order:
1 - Axle end bolt.
2 - Axle pinch bolts.
3 - Fork brace bolts.
Then go for a ride to see if that helps get rid of the wobble.
One other thing: Instead of balancing tires you might want to consider using Ride-On.