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TIRE TALK - when the rubber meets the road
- Hatchet
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- It's better in the wind.
Attachment honda-cb350-brat-2.jpg not found
Anyone got any buying advice on these (buying advice, not riding advice)? Firestone is a fortune. Coker doesn't seem much cheaper...
Bikers are a rare breed.
Harley riders are a dime a dozen.
'83 KZ750 LTD K1. "Don't make me get the belt..."
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- 650ed
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1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- gravit8
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I worked at a Harley dealer last summer and they charged something like $300 for a new dunlop mount and balance (YIKES!) on just the rear, usually the first to go on the hogs.
For the record, though, I've easily put 6,000 miles on the Harley branded dunlops that came on the bike, and they were already looking a bit worn with some slight 'cracking' at the joints of the tred pattern.
And here's another really stupid, if obvious question raised by another poster:
Ahh, do these tires require tubes, or what? Is that just a little something extra some owners prefer in the way of 'blowout insurance'? Seems like my rims say 'tubeless' on the somewhere...
I honestly don't know how fast I was going, officer; My speedo tops out at 85...
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- gravit8
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Mullineaux wrote:
bountyhunter wrote: ]The local shop here gives free mount and balance if you buy the tires there. Saves me money.
I asked the local bike shop what a new set of tires would run me if I just bring them the bike and they quoted me $428 (dunlop tires) and said it would take at least 2 days because they don't have one of the tires in stock. :blink: The Shinko 712's ran me $160 with tubes, wheel bands, and shipping. My brother in law has a motorcycle jack/stand and I'm just going to take them the rims like my Uncle did. They charged him $80 to mount and balance tires on rims he brought in.
Yep I got about the same quotes calling around the area (Cedar Rapids/Iowa City, IA). Thing is for the same tires and service, the prices were literally all over the place, and I couldn't justify saving what will apparently be ~$40 if I buy in-house when the additional cost of the tires themselves is like $60 or $70, and they aren't what I wanted anyways.
Give and take, I guess. I can't fault a place for earning a living...but seriously, $95 to dismount, change and balance a rear? All by itself? When the other place charges $50 for the pair on the bike? *scratches head Funny thing is these two shops are literally less than a mile from each other. lolz
I honestly don't know how fast I was going, officer; My speedo tops out at 85...
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- Mullineaux
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gravit8 wrote: Ahh, do these tires require tubes, or what? Is that just a little something extra some owners prefer in the way of 'blowout insurance'? Seems like my rims say 'tubeless' on the somewhere...
From my internet research it's (mostly) no longer the tires that require tubes but the rims. You can find tube type tires but they're a small minority and generally "S" not "H" rated. There seems to be a group of people that insist tubes in a tubeless tires is a recipe for certain death. The vast majority of voices say that modern tires can be run with or without tubes. Both my 80's tires say tubeless but they're spoked wheels that obviously require tubes. I even did searches for people running Shinko 712's with tubes and there are riders that claim to ride the sh*t out of their bike with tubed 712's without problems.
KZ650 ( '77 Engine, '78 frame, 80's ignition, MAC 4-2 exhaust, Pods, lowered [links])
1980 XS1100 full Vetter dresser
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- Cuff
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- Powerstroke_fan
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1980 kz1000B4 LTD- 1327cc 9-1 comp
Ported J model head
Psp-3x cams
RS 36s
Welded MK11 crank
Back-cut MK11 trans
MTC 2 stage lock up
Stretched 4-6 over running Hayabusa rear rim with 190 rear tire
Complete frame brace kit installed
And Much Much more- SOLD
2014- ZX14R all stock for now
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- ramtough_63
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I only have around 600 miles no noticable wear couple cuts from my limited frame mod experience but so far I'm not convinced a 260.00 conti from the local Kaw shop is a superior tire.
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- Cuff
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To me if a person was looking to be 'safe' all the time then riding, period, shouldn't be something they do.
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- damarble
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Cuff wrote: Well Powerstroke we all have our own comfort levels. However please don't confuse inexpensive with cheap. I've had cheap and the Shinko's are not that.
To me if a person was looking to be 'safe' all the time then riding, period, shouldn't be something they do.
I have to agree. Nothing unsafe about a Shinko, it's no more likely to blow out that any other big name tire. There's one instance of a blowout report that keeps getting rehashed and in the end it was abuse or some other outside factor, I forget. A Battlax would have done the same thing, while costing 3x as much and offering no better characteristics.
Go green, buy a Kawasaki!
82 KZ750M CSR Build Thread
89 ZX600C Streetfighter
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- gravit8
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One of my thoughts was indeed 'If you get what you pay for...' and how that relates to my personal safety while on the road. Obviously 'off-brand' tires have something of a stigma - I worked at a Harley dealer last year, and of course the line was always 'better safe than sorry'. However, that does tend to limit your exposure to the other options. Just because I ate at McDonald's once it doesn't mean that's all I'll eat, ever again (blargh). Anyways, the dealer wouldn't mount any tires you didn't buy there, and of course if you wanted anything but the Dunlops you had to 'pre-order' and all the other BS that came along with that sort of setup.
That said, I've seen some pretty raunchy Harley-branded dunlops, just totally worn from a bad 'alignment' and balance. Not that you'd notice on one of those bikes (vibraaaaaaattttiiiiiion). lol.
I honestly don't know how fast I was going, officer; My speedo tops out at 85...
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- gravit8
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Aaaaanyways, my rear was starting to show some thread and the front was a smooth as a baby's butt by the time I got them off and down to the local Honda shop. $64 and a day later I had the Shinko's mounted in place of the old Harley-branded Dunlops. My first ride was weird, the old tires were already very worn when I got the bike and had a nice wide flat profile on the rear. So when I started to lean the bike on the new rubber, it turned in a nice, even arc and felt like the rims were loose or something. But I'd tightened everything, it was just the nice even arc of the new tires that felt weird, lol. Took a minute to get comfy on the bike again, but then I hit the highway and rode a sold 60 miles, and it was smooth as buttah.
I can't honestly say I noticed much difference as far as ride or grip is concerned, I've got a few other things to do on the bike before I go out and see what's what - new brakes/brake fluid, oil change, valve adjust, some other odds n ends. But the injection nipples are still there after my sprint down the highway, so that's cool. Also, the profile on the tires is very different than the old Dunlops, it gives the bike a more aggressive look, I can't explain it but it looks like a real sport bike now instead of an old man cruiser. A friend of mine, who isn't really into bikes, actually noticed the difference, asked me what I'd changed and didn't believe it was just the tires.
All I can say is, I can't wait to ride now, the bike just looks so much meaner and I'm all down with that.
If anyone has more tire stories it's be great to hear 'em, there are a few other tire threads out there but since they're the most commonly replaced items on these bikes, it can't hurt to get more info out there. From horror stories to love stories, road cruising or track blasting, post those tire tales! I'm off to order some new plug cables...
here's a shot of the old Dunlops...yep. rolled the dice every time I hit the road:
I honestly don't know how fast I was going, officer; My speedo tops out at 85...
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