The location of the center of gravity (and therefore the weight distribution) is one of the biggest compromises in vehicle dynamics. Front to back determines the static weight distribution and the height determines the dynamic distribution due to weight transfer during acceleration and braking. For example, if the assumption is that the bike/track will generate good traction you'd generally want a lower CG to reduce excessive wheelieing (both accel and nose wheelies). If traction is assumed to be limited you'd want a higher CG in order to generate greater weight transfer (front and rear) to help traction during accel and braking. Of course there's everything in between as well. CG height also influences how easily the bike leans (Roll) into a corner. Front to back distribution affects the cornering and straight line balance of the bike. Does the bike oversteer or understeer, have a "light" front end etc. The ease by which a bike rotates about the CG (pitches, yaws, rolls) has more to do with how the weight is distributed about (the distance from) the CG than the exact CG location. The more weight that can be "located" closer to the CG the easier it is to pitch/yaw/roll. This isn't always desirable as some Yamaha critics will claim that the "mass centralization" went too far and that's why that bike (the 450YZF) tends to endo far too easily as the front pitches down. The CG also affects how the rear suspension "squats" or "jacks" due to chain torque and chassis kinematics. Both being dynamic phenomenon and largely influenced again by the bikes power and available traction. This is one area of vehicle dynamics where the Alta is very different from an ICE bike. The Alta's power (and related traction) is smooth, continuous and seamless without the huge swings in torque/traction that an ICE bike generates at every shift. Therefore, the Alta should be much more "settled" in the rear (establishing a relatively stable attitude) during acceleration everything else being equal (which we know is never the case). Just some food for thought.