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Your cart is empty.Bilal L.
Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2024
Just balanced my rear wheel and these are great, I can adjust to heavier or lighter weights easily in a more concentrated area than the stick on weights. They install easy but we'll see how well they stay on the spokes at constant high speeds. Plenty of weights for the money and decent quality materials, lots of extra screws for future use.
Fooser Faves
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2024
Look great, really cool. Easy installation.
dan
Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2023
I have some of these you can’t have too many. You get 4 different sizes and 2 of each. Nothing is labeled so you might get mixed up in the future but maybe it’s a look thing because the other ones weren’t labeled either. They come with the hardware and the wrench to install them. Good find.
John Wight
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2023
Once I took my front wheel into a shop to have them load a new tire. The tech asked if I wanted balancing weights for my dual sport. I said sure. He asked, Lead or steel? I asked what the difference would be. He said that if I planned to suck on the weights, I should get the steel ones. Otherwise, the lead ones were half the price.I wouldn't suck on these, but you probably could. And they look much better than the steel ones I got that day. For a street bike, these attractive weights look about as good as you can buy. And the price is good at the time of this review.No documentation, however, so if you don't mind searching the internet and guessing, that may not bother you. It did bother me. Minus one star.
rugslayer
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2023
Much nicer than stick on weights. My only issue is it does not slide down all the way on the spoke I have to drill it out a little bit to fit over the base of the spoke.
A.M.
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2023
Not bad, but there are sets that also include .25 oz weights for the same price. I weighed each weight and each grub screw on a milligram scale and found almost all of them to be close enough with the exception of the ¾ oz weights, which came up slightly short, even with the weight of the grub screws added. In the pictures, the first .5 oz weight is without the grub screw and the second picture is the same weight with the grub screw added. The third one is the other .5 oz weight with the grub screw. The .75 oz weights each weight it at about .73 oz with the grub screws added and were the only weights in the set to be .02 oz off.Most of the grub screws were the same weight, but there were a few outliers that were slightly lighter than the others. This doesn’t really matter because there were plenty of grub screws provided that the end user can be picky about which ones to use, if they really wanted to be nit-picky.Overall, these will do the trick, but there are sets available that include .25 oz, 1.5 oz, and also 1.75 oz weights in the set for around the same price point. I can’t vouch for preciseness, or lack thereof, of other sets, as I only have experience with this one at this time.Don’t forget to use temporary thread locker on your grub screws once you confirm which weight(s) you need to place on your wheel!
Bonwit
Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2023
In my opinion, spoke weights are the best way to balance a spoked motorcycle wheel. You never have to worry about them flying off, as you do the stick-on variety. This set won’t disappoint. The kit comes with two each in four different weights. The material is solid brass, and they’re attached using a simple grub screw. They even include the Allen wrench needed to tighten them. There’s a recess in the opening to accommodate the spoke nipple, and the grub screw is positioned so it bears down on the nipple, rather than the spoke itself, preventing possible damage to the spoke. Overall, a nice piece of kit.
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