I swear that at idle, with the clutch out, there seems to be a rattling sound coming from the trans. It goes away with the clutch pulled. Also, I don't really hear it when the engine is cold, just when the engine is warm
I had exactly that symptom. For me, As it turned out the alternator mounted incorrectly. The drive dogs have to sit directly in between the sets if monkey nutz. If even one of them shifts during install and doesnt properly insulate the drive dog, the drive dog will slap against the separator walls within the cup at low rpms. At higher rpms the slapping sound goes away. I tried the install a couple times and got the sound before finally using a very small amt of silicone sealant to keep the monkey nutz in place during install. Made sure the guide marks were lined up properly and on the third try the clacking went away....
That's probably the simplest possible cause...other things would be a much greater PITA to diagnose and fix.
The clutch assembly is supposed to be balanced, meaning you're supposed to mark the clutch parts and reassemble exactly as installed. Also, there is a clutch centering tool for installing the clutch and ensuring that the friction disk is properly centered on install. If it wasn't properly centered, that could cause vibration at high rpm's, I would think. Lots of people don't have the clutch alignment tool and use all kinds of kooky BS to get the clutch pack in without it. In a pinch, a screwdriver with duct tape wrapped around it would work...but not sure how well. So it is possible that an improperly installed clutch could cause excess vibration.
Having said that, every bike vibrates. Wearing summer gloves I feel it too at +5000 rpms. If you don't have a frame of reference it's hard to determine what's normal. Best thing to do IMO would be to find another motobricker to ride it and tell you how normal it is.
With the alternator...
The original nuts vibrated, though they weren't in bad shape. Kinda struggled to get it together.
Then put in the new "nuts" recently, kinda struggled, no change.
Today when I put the "nuts" back in I used vaseline and the alternator slipped on really easily. But it's still vibrating.
I'm gonna try taking the alternator off and going for a good ride, then evaluating the situation again and putting it back together, again. The cup the nuts go in looks to be in good shape along with the piece that drives it. It seems like any error in alternator mounting would have been not-done again but if it took you that many tries I'm willing to keep trying.
I've read about how the clutch assembly has tick marks that are supposed to be staggered. I didn't take note of any marks but then again I didn't touch the disk, pressure plate, etc when I took the trans off to clean and grease the splines.
I agree that it would help to try riding another K, or having another K rider try mine, but I've read in many places that these are often said to be some of the smoothest motorcycle engines ever. With BMW's having a reputation for being great on long distance trips it doesn't seem like my body parts should be going numb in less than an hour at cruising speeds :falldown: