Tire Advice

Started by Com4tably Numb, April 03, 2011, 07:58:27 PM

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Com4tably Numb

Buying a new set of tires for my 2002 Ducati M750.

Any advice on which I should consider?

Will be using the bike for commuting in Los Angeles and SFV, CA where the roads are crappy.

Thanks
"Want me to drag him outside and beat the shit out of him?"

muskrat

Pirelli Angels are great. I have those on the M900 and have deep treads.
Can we thin the gene pool? 

2015 MTS 1200
09 Electra Glide

bdub

Same here. Except for missing the little orange sticker, I like them better or as well as the corsa IIIs i used to run
2005 900ie
now with mivv s'

Y2K  M900 ie  totaled  10/09/08

Jarvicious

We're liberated by the hearts that imprison us.  We're taken hostage by the ones that we break.

bikepilot

For commuting I like sport-touring tires as they last a lot longer and many grip better in cool/wet weather than supersport rubber.  My favorites are Avon storms.  A lot of folks really like Pilot Road 2s as well.
2009 XB12XT
2006 Monster 620 (wife's)
1997 TL1000S
1975 Kawasaki H1 Mach III
2001 CR250R (CO do-it-all bike)
2000 XR650R (dez racer)
2003 KX100 (wife's)
1994 DR250SE (wife's/my city commuter)

The Bearded Duc

Quote from: bikepilot on April 04, 2011, 12:31:55 PM
For commuting I like sport-touring tires as they last a lot longer and many grip better in cool/wet weather than supersport rubber.  My favorites are Avon storms.  A lot of folks really like Pilot Road 2s as well.


+1

If most of your riding is going to be commuting I would pass on the softer compound tires.

Sport touring tires are the way to go. Avon tires are great, and quite a number of people swear by the Pilot Roads. I have Bridgestone BT-021's with over 6k miles on 'em already and no squaring off yet. I'm in the canyons at least once a week and they're great there too.
2001 M750 - Sold
2006 S2R 800 - She's just darling

Com4tably Numb

Thanks for all the replies.


I was looking into Michelin Pilot Road 3 Tires, they seem great. And with this crazy weather in Los Angeles, CA not knowing when it will rain, even if the weatherman says so.

But I will also look into the others.

I will be commuting mostly, but I feel like in a month or two I will want to go to the track.
"Want me to drag him outside and beat the shit out of him?"

sbrguy

i personally feel that if you want a jack of all trades tire, that can do an occasional track day, commuting, occasional rain,  fun weekend canyon riding as long as you are not really advanced, and has good but not great wear.

then you can't go wrong with the tire that started it all the pilot powers. 

its not the best in any category (its middle of the road for wear, track, commuting, etc), but its not the worst either, its a jack of all trades tire for a bike like the monster.


The Bearded Duc

I live in LA too.

Just sent you a PM.
2001 M750 - Sold
2006 S2R 800 - She's just darling

bikepilot

The road 3s look like they'd be better in the wet than the road 2s.  I haven't tried a pair yet.  Road 2s aren't too impressive in the wet - not dangerous, but not great either.  Avon Storms are pretty darn good in the wet.  I drug pegs on the 919 on a damp road on storms (was heavily loaded and the big tank bag prevented much hanging off...)  [evil]  The PR3s have a ton more sipping than the Storms.  Don't know how the compound compares.
2009 XB12XT
2006 Monster 620 (wife's)
1997 TL1000S
1975 Kawasaki H1 Mach III
2001 CR250R (CO do-it-all bike)
2000 XR650R (dez racer)
2003 KX100 (wife's)
1994 DR250SE (wife's/my city commuter)

badgalbetty

a good all round tire is a Michelin pilot power. I used them for years and love them. [thumbsup]
"Its never too late to be who you might have been" - George Elliot.

He Man

Quote from: badgalbetty on April 05, 2011, 02:10:16 PM
a good all round tire is a Michelin pilot power. I used them for years and love them. [thumbsup]

If you do the math, you can only get about 6000 miles out of $140 bucks of tire or about 10,000 miles out of $160 worth of tire. You dont save much + for some the tire will rot and dry out before reaching 10,000 miles and the pilot power is a better choice overall. Though as a commuting tire or on a big 1000cc twin, they tend to go much quicker.

scduc

I've always felt confident with my stock BT-014s. They did wear a little quick, now I have a BT-016 and will replace the front before riding with a BT comparable.
08' S2R 1K   That was close  damn near lost a $400 hand cart.

csorin

I've been running Metzeler Sportec M5's for the past 2k miles.  I've no complaints, and only good things to say.  The tire is a rounded profile, so turn in is smooth, albeit slightly slower than the harsher profile tires.  I'd buy them again without hesitation.   

jsanford

Quote from: csorin on April 05, 2011, 08:49:52 PM
I've been running Metzeler Sportec M5's for the past 2k miles.  I've no complaints, and only good things to say.  The tire is a rounded profile, so turn in is smooth, albeit slightly slower than the harsher profile tires.  I'd buy them again without hesitation.   

+1 on Metzlers, although make sure they were manufactured at the Germany plant.
'08 695 - Seattle