New tires are installed. I had to use tubes because the tires I bought are tube type, so that cost me a couple pounds. I'm not going total weight weenie, though. All my bearings checked out, including the head tube, so I don't think that's where my deceleration wobble was coming from. Early tests are that the new tires has solved it, though. I went with 120/80 rear and 110/80 front. I know that's a little wider than stock (well, a lot wider in front), but it doesn't seem to be a problem. If anything the steering feels lighter. Maybe the wider front is a big enough diameter change to affect the geometry, or maybe the new tires have less of a flat spot, although the old ones seemed fine. Clearance between the rear tire and the swing arm is roughly 6mm. Pirelli specifies the max mounted width for the 120 tire as 125mm, but it looks to be a little less than that on the LS wheels. Oh yeah, I painted the wheels black, just to piss off the purists.

For brakes I went with SBC floating rotors and organic pads. No more squealing, which is nice. Stopping seems about the same but the handle pull feels shorter before max grab. They aren't really bedded in yet so things may change.
I had a fair amount of trouble tuning the carbs so here's what finally worked for me. First, I adjusted the valves. Next I made sure the bean can was clean and appeared to be functioning correctly. Then I got the timing set. You can't really set the timing without the valves adjusted or the bean can functioning because both can influence the timing. I made some spark plug "extenders" by grinding down the heads of some appropriately sized (M3?) screws so I could thread them into the tops of the spark plugs and then clip the plug wires to the screws. Trying to short the cylinders and adjust the carbs by ear was beyond my skill set, so I adjusted the idle purposely high and clipped a test lead between the extender and a cylinder fin, one cylinder at a time. With the test lead in place I adjusted the idle to about 800rpm, warmed up of course, running on only one cylinder (due to the test lead shorting the plug of the opposite cylinder). This way I could easily hear to adjust the air/fuel mixture to the optimal setting. With both air/fuel mixtures adjusted I brought the idle back to a reasonable level with both cylinders running. Then, using a homebrew U-tube manometer I was able to easily adjust the idle sync. Be sure to leave probably at least 2' of height above the fluid level in the manometer if using ATF for the fluid. Last, with the manometer still hooked up I set the off-idle sync with the cable barrel adjusters. The bike starts up quicker now and doesn't need as much choke. It runs quieter, sounds better, idle s more stable and pulls harder. Best "mod" yet.

After brakes and tires I think I'm good to pass safety now. A couple more fluids to check/change and I'll consider things good for a bit.