Hate when that happens....I’ve seen this with dual compound tires. The center is hard and wears longer, then right off the hard compound becomes an unevenly worn mess.
Hate when that happens....I’ve seen this with dual compound tires. The center is hard and wears longer, then right off the hard compound becomes an unevenly worn mess.
Oh boy! You are going to get a variety of answers to that question! Everyone seems to have their own preferences. I am currently using Dunlop Roadmaster lll's, They seem to wear well so far. Got about 7k on the rear and 3k on the front. Going to try Shinko's when it's time for a change.The tire itself is a Michellin. Should I change to a different brand? What kind of tire is best for just daily commute over bad roads in Southern California freeways every day?
Best for freeway commute, saving money and max traction. Double dark side. Car tire on the back and rear motorcycle tire on the front. I'm at over 42k miles on my current front, 60k miles on my rear. I do a 45 mile commute every day (takes me 42 minutes in the morning (light traffic)), 38 of it highway.Also, any advice for what type is best for freeway commute?
Red One,Tell you what I would do if it was my bike. First after you get your suspension sorted out as to making sure everything is ok and lined up. I would get me a front set of OEM tires for your bike. The oem for a 2002 ST1100 are Bridgestone G547 for the front tire and Bridgestone G548 for the rear tire and set the pressures as per manufacturers specs. If you have an 2002 ABS model the correct oem tires are Bridgestone BT 54F for the front and BT 54R for the rear. Never heard of funny tire wear, cupping, or noises with the original equipment tires at the recommended pressures. Btw these are only tires I will run on my bike and they have served me well for the last 19 years.
Look on top of the forum. You will see "Riding" click on that (open) then there's RAN list in CA.Not to show my ignorance, but what is a RAN list?
According to the Bridgestone fitment chart those sizes were good from 91 model up to 2002. I still have the original front fork springs and I changed the fork oil at 36,000 miles. I have over 72 K now. I'm running 36 up front and 42 in the rear tire. My thoughts on the oem tire is they were designed for this bike specially since this tire size fits very few models.Red One,
Were they still fitting 547 and 548's as OEM in 2002?
This is a question rather than a statement (makes a change ). Someone will know.
On the issue of pressures, I'm not so sure running 36 or 38 in the front makes any sodding difference to cupping. Or for that matter neither does fork oil, balance, damping issues etc. Bad dampers cause irregular tyre wear basically because the wheel is bouncing in an uncontrolled way. Fork oil and balance may add to this but wouldn't in my opinion cause cupping.
From my own experience on the same bike with no other changes other than tyres some tyres cup and some don't.
Bridgestone 023's Cup like a bas...d.
Bridgestone T30's No Cupping, zilch, bugger all.
Bridgestone T31's Less than bugger all cupping. Double zilch.
Upt'North.
Try partszilla. Or parts unlimited. I think that's where my dealer got my rear tire.....but it will take a couple of days for shipping.I put a few more psi into my front tire yesterday before I made the trip home. I've been shopping for tires online, Revzila and a few others and 90% of the tires, especially the 'good' ones, are all "out of stock" for my size, which is 110/80/18.