I have worked out some issues going back to doing a better job of getting the wheel centered and running true. I cleaned up the cones and added some lube, cleaned up the wheel centers and backs and made sure I was lifting the wheel and getting it positioned correctly. I also blew out the position sensor and checked all the connections.
I think I also figured out that just loosening, turning the spindle, and retightening it doesn't necessarily keep the wheel centered back on the spindle that well. I found repeatability improved if I loosened it a lot, turned the spindle 90 degrees and then lifted and tightened it back up.
When I see wheels that are balanced at a tire shop they typically spin them once, add weight and I guess spin them again to verify and there done. Weights are in one spot on the outside plane and one spot on the inside plane.
Whenever I spin them on my machine, the first spin gives a weight inside and out, I add the weight, then when I spin them again it typically calls out for additional weight. Its usually on the inside and will ask for .25 to .75 additional. If the original weight was at 12 o'clock position, the additional weight is usually somewhere between 12-4 or 12-8. If I add the weight it usually comes back 00-00 balanced. My manual says it can take up to 3 spins to perform a balance.
If I read online it basically says that having weights in two different locations on the same plane is not correctly balanced. I did find some information on how to move the weights to solve that problem and did spend some time doing that, but theres no way a tire shop is going to take the time to do that. So far I have just been working with the 17" tire/wheels off my Suburban and some 15" trailer tire/wheels that are typical white spoke trailer wheels and used 235/75-15 AT's. The manual says max diameter for the machine is 31.5" and both of these are around 30.5", so its near the max if that makes a difference.
Any thoughts on the machine calling for additional weight and having weights on two different locations on the same plane? I feel like I have have solved some issues and trying to figure out if the rest is just the machine? Or if I should be looking at something else?
Since I read your original post, when I think of it, I have been loosening the collar, moving the wheel and re-spinning a few assemblies when balancing on my Hunter at work. I have had one of them out of about a dozen ask for different weights and only .25oz.
The typical procedure is to spin once, get a reading and add weight and then do a "checkspin" On that machine (a 2 year old Hunter RoadForce Elite) the check spin rarely asks for a weight change but it does happen. Of course, it spins the wheel to where the weights go, holds it, and puts a laser red line where to put the weight. It also has a camera to read the wheel profile so it knows pretty exactly where each plane is.
I have a Snap On Hand spin machine in my trailer that we use at the track. Conditions aren't nearly as nice as in the shop, I am usually doing it in the trailer which may bounce or move. Temps can vary quite a bit as well. Also, it is not nearly as precise as to where you put the weights and on this balancer, it is less than 50% that the first spin gets it to zero.
As far as weights on more than one place on a single plane....on a purely technical basis if you get it balanced to zero it is good. Zero is zero.
However, it is fundamentally sloppy. There are people here who judge a 140lb truck tire/wheel assembly with 2oz of weight as junk and poorly balanced - I work in the real world and am not nearly that picky (2-3oz per plane is my personal limit) but the overall goal is to achieve balance with as little weight as possible. More weight is ugly and adds more failure points in the future. Especially with stick on weights, a .25oz slice seems to be much more likely to fall off than a longer piece.
My personal procedure - (FYI I work almost exclusively with stick on weights) if the original weight was at 12 and it asks for more weight between 10-2, I add it next to the original stack. If it asks for more between 8-4, I remove the amount it asks for from the original stack and do a checkspin.
If the checkspin is still not zero, I see if the above will work again, but if not, or the additional weight is in the 90 degree dead zone (8-10 and 2-4) I usually remove the weight on that plane altogether and start over.
If my weight changes don't "make sense" on the checkspin (e.g. I added .50oz and it changes 1oz in a random location) I tend to pull all the weights, reseat the wheel on the balancer and start over.
Overall, judging by the weights I scrape off and the vibration complaints I fix from other shops, not many tire shops spend anywhere near the time or thought that you or I do towards balancing.
HTH,
DaveW