Here's how we tie ours down. Soft-ties around the lower triple clamps, but you have to be especially careful not to really deform the upper fork covers. We've never been able to not deform them some, but I can always straighten them afterwords. Also, MAKE SURE your ties are super clean, otherwise you'll scratch the chrome. For the rear, we attach to the "dog bone" at the rear of the frame/tranny and go essentially straight back to our trailer points. If your trailer isn't very wide, you can also loop one around the rear tire, running from side to side to really help preventing it from shifting. Depending on the trailer floor, you may need to do the same for the front tire. Unless you have a wheel chock, it's very tough to prevent the front wheel from walking to one side or the other. We trailered her SERG from Columbia, SC to Oklahoma City this way and didn't have any problems. The crash bar at the frame doesn't give enough leverage to prevent the bike from falling over. I always sort of tighten the fronts (just enough to hold it upright), then really tighten the rears and then fully tighten the fronts (almost bottoming the suspension). This way everything is tightening against everything else. Prevents things from loosening up. We use "ratchets" for the fronts and "pinchers" for the rears. Hope this helps.