Magdave
New member
OK have to jump in on this thread.
The least scientific and accurate thing about the laser alignment is the positioning of the handlebars straight ahead and then the resultant alignment of front wheels to rear rim.
When we do an alignment we do our best to position the handlebars straight. this is an arbitrary thing. one person may say move it left, another move it right... then the front toe in is set equally spaced in regards to the rear rim.
Unless your belt alignment was way out of whack to start. i.e. needing a lot of rear wheel adjuster movement to get proper tracking. The alignment will not be changed much when your belt is again tracking correctly. And any change will not be to total toe in or out but to the skew between front and rear wheels.
I recently replaced bearings in the rear wheel on an RT. While it was apart I disassembled and cleaned the adjusters. Hence the need to re do the belt alignment once put back together. I tried three times to adjust the belt with rear wheel jacked up. Three times I thought I had it tracking correctly and once taken for a test drive found more adjustment needed. Once I finally got belt tracking where it needed to be. Alignment was well within tolerance.
Just our two cents worth take it or leave it.
There was the term I was searching for "skew" :thumbup: