Donnie, as others have found while playing with the belt alignment & tension, you might need to
find a way that works for you to either pull the entire wheel & axle assy forward towards the swing arm pivot so that it's held tight against the adjusters or to push it back away from the swing arm pivot as you adjust the belt so that you've actually got the belt under some tension and that you then maintain said tension as you tighten the axle tube in place.... :lecturef_smilie:
Some use ratchet straps & blocks of wood; others use rubber mallets or hammers of some sort; some even spend $$ on replacing the dodgy '
only pull back' OEM Adjusters with fixed into the swing arm '
push/pull' type adjusters, but once you've read all the threads, posts, & watched all the vids & links, it eventually comes back to
you needing to find a technique to do all this that works for you! :dontknow:
Oh, and at the risk of maybe trying to teach you to suck eggs, but for the clarity of any who don't yet get this, do please realise that loosening one side of the axle tube also loosens the other side of the axle tube; and that the adjusters will only
TIGHTEN & pull
back on the axle tube, so if you want to move one or both sides of the axle tube
forwards, you need to loosen everything off enough to let it move it forwards, get it where you want it,
AND THEN HOLD IT FIRMLY THERE while you tighten the axle tube in place! And in the case of belt
ALIGNMENT, this really is a situation where '
near enough is good enough', cos
the belt WILL MOVE around on the pulley as you ride, and it'll do that
ESPECIALLY whenever you reverse! :banghead:
So get the tension pretty close to where you want it; then get the alignment somewhere in the right ballpark, making sure that even if it
IS touching the flange instead of just near it: - which btw, is perfectly acceptable - given the following caveats:
- the belt is not rubbing too hard on the inside flange of that rear sprocket, ensuring that it's neither burning the edge of the belt nor is the belt climbing up on the flange as the sprocket rotates; and
- that it's not running any part of the belt off the outside edge of the sprocket as you ride.
Just about anywhere between those extremes is fine and will work for hundreds of thousands of miles!

hyea: