This thread got my attention because (1) I hadn't read previously that the R65 is particularly susceptible to tank-slapping, and (2) I've had some experience with tank-slappers (a relatively minor personal episode or two and a far more serious incident that I experienced in its entirety). At the outset I'll state that I'm a believer in the existence of the phenomenon; what to me are arguable are the cause(s) of it and the appropriate remedie(s), once it occurs.
First, an R65-newbie definitional question: Is a tank-slapper the same thing as the term "boxer wobble" that I've seen referenced, but not defined, in Noemi Berry's R65 articles and those of others regarding BMWs in general? (If it is, then Berry, as I recall, doesn't think an R65 is particularly susceptible to tank-slappers.)
In high school, I rode a Yahama scooter that I had bought new by mail order (4-cycle, about 5 hp, no speedo but obviously capable of > 55mph when in good tune and with good weather conditions). It had very modest front fork rake, and (my recollection is vague) very little trail. I had one or two occasions when I got some bar wobblies that I survived by backing off the throttle carefully, and letting the bike do what it wanted while applying just a touch of rear brake. Additionally, I've gotten high-speed bar wobble on bicycles, both of which were quick-steering to the point of being fidgety because of very little rake and trail. I found the experience more unsettling on a bicycle than on the scooter -- at least until I witnessed someone on another scooter wipe out from a wobble.
My friend had borrowed someone else's Cushman Road King scooter, and he and I were riding about double the speed limit on a very wide city street that had a downhill lefthand sweeper. No problem with either radius or crown, and no road surface hazards; should have been a piece of cake at even higher speeds than ours at the time. Coming out of the sweeper, my friend got the wobbles. I was behind him about 50 yards and observed the degenerative process close-hand. He and the scooter parted ways eventually; at that point I was totally involved in avoiding two still moving objects in the road, a sliding scooter and a tumbling rider. (I had to steer between them.) He was without a helmet (not required by law yet, and virtually no one in town used one) and wearing jeans and a t-shirt. Luckily, he had broken nothing, though he left a lot of hide on the asphalt and spent a day or two in hospital for observation.
The point of this ramble is that I remain convinced that in this case, the wobble increased so quickly that it would have required much more luck than technique to stay upright. Three factors: (1) Small wheels on the scooter (don't know what the rims were, but I doubt they were as large as 12 inches, and maybe as small as 10; (2) high center of gravity; and (3) very low-tech, low-speed, low-cost design.
I didn't even consider a small-wheel scooter when I decided to get back on two wheels a little more than a year ago. (I did toy with the notion of one of the "super scooters."
BTW, there was an extensive discussion of tank-slappers a few weeks ago in one of the BMWMOA forums (the Airhead Forum, I think). I think the sense of the discussion was that a confluence of several factors (the bike (design and mechanical condition), road-surface conditions, and speed) that can override the gyroscopic equilibrium of the front wheel and create an oscillation of the fork. It's worth checking out. (MOA permits guests to browse its forum.) Also, as bjamesw pointed out, the critical tolerance is that first 1/1000 (inch or mm, take your choice) of sloppiness or flex at a particular speed that leads to an oscillation.
Any physicists in the group who can explore the theoretical possibility of the interaction of two gyroscopes (three, counting the flywheel) spinning in different planes, and possible interactions if one or more of them is spinning erratically on its axis?
Anyway, congratulations on your fix. Now, if I can just find an OEM Suzuki and a good welder . . ..
John