Well, I started Riding in 1972, and the tires were NOT as good as now. Synthetic rubber is much better than natural. The old rubber did check and harden. The old tires had far less traction. They lasted, but they were not as good as any today.slimcolo wrote: Also most modern tyres are built very cheap (synthetic vs real rubber) and will develop dry rot in 5-6 years. I have some older tyres laying around from the 60s and 70s that never dry rotted like the modern "crumb".
I have the original brakes on my 1991 NH750. 24K miles. I am the second owner, but the OEM stuff sure lasted.slimcolo wrote: As to brakes on my 72 and 73 FLHs
front pads last about 4K
on my 73 rear pads last about 3K
On my 72 rear linings (drum) last over 70K (the 72 with rear drum has far better stopping power, takes less foot pressure to activate and do not lose when wet) Harley replaced drums with discs on BTs totally in 73 but failed to have a disc preform as well as a drum until the 80s
The brand of tire isn't usually the reason you get a lot of miles out of a tire, it often is the model. For instance, a tire designed for trackdays has a very soft compound and wears out quickly, while touring designed tires tend to have a harder, longer lasting compound, The trade off is traction.slimcolo wrote:The least I ever got was on a rear tyre 1100 miles and had cords showing (DUNSTOP) Most I ever got was from a Goodyear Speedgrip about 20K. (both rear tyres on same bike)
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