Yet another new tyre
- sapaul
- Legendary 2000
- Posts: 2387
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2005 3:45 am
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 90
- My Motorcycle: 2011 R1200R 07 BMW GS, Kymco 250 little
- Location: South Africa
I used to get 14 000k's out of my rear tyre on my RT, I have to accept that this bike will chew tyres, the trick is to find what is going to give me a reasonable amount of mileage but still give performance. You know, like the guy's that are still looking for a woman.
I spent my therapy money an a K1200S
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
A cyber friend out in Oregon who is known as a very aggresive rider on a Bandit 1200 has tried most of the tires and now uses only the Metz Z6 or the Pirelli Diablo Strada. Those two are almost identical now that Pirelli has bought Metzeler and the Stradas are made at the Metz plant in Germany.
Jack
02GS500
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v443/jcp8832/2002gs500avatar100x63.jpg[/img]
02GS500
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v443/jcp8832/2002gs500avatar100x63.jpg[/img]
- sapaul
- Legendary 2000
- Posts: 2387
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2005 3:45 am
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 90
- My Motorcycle: 2011 R1200R 07 BMW GS, Kymco 250 little
- Location: South Africa
BIG difference in how the Z6's feel, there is a definite tendancy to roll into the turns with these tyres. From the first k the front drops quicker and requires less push on the bars, the grip feels good and they feel "stiffer" than the Moe1.
I spent my therapy money an a K1200S
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
- mysta2
- Legendary 300
- Posts: 361
- Joined: Wed Mar 02, 2005 4:23 pm
- Sex: Male
- Location: Little Elm, TX.
I just swapped out my rear Pirelli Diablo (showing belt at just under 4500miles) for a Pilot Power.
The Diablo was on since november (when I bought the bike) so it was mostly restricted to winter commuting and not much fun; it was prettymuch beat right down the center. I'm hoping I can get significantly more side wear on this new one with the weather warming up... especially since it's a lot more conical and will wear the center out real fast. Texas in general can be real hard on the center of a tire.
The Diablo was on since november (when I bought the bike) so it was mostly restricted to winter commuting and not much fun; it was prettymuch beat right down the center. I'm hoping I can get significantly more side wear on this new one with the weather warming up... especially since it's a lot more conical and will wear the center out real fast. Texas in general can be real hard on the center of a tire.
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- sapaul
- Legendary 2000
- Posts: 2387
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2005 3:45 am
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 90
- My Motorcycle: 2011 R1200R 07 BMW GS, Kymco 250 little
- Location: South Africa
When we get 38 deg C days here, a friend of mine said that the tar can get up to 85C+. That sounds like enough heat to melt the rubber of your tyres without actually moving.
I spent my therapy money an a K1200S
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
- mysta2
- Legendary 300
- Posts: 361
- Joined: Wed Mar 02, 2005 4:23 pm
- Sex: Male
- Location: Little Elm, TX.
yeah there's definiately that too... but I was more refferancing the fact that all the roads here are perfectly straight.sapaul wrote:When we get 38 deg C days here, a friend of mine said that the tar can get up to 85C+. That sounds like enough heat to melt the rubber of your tyres without actually moving.
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Check out my [url=http://www.totalmotorcycle.com/BBS/viewtopic.php?t=5844]blog[/url] for the latest on my little project.
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