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Tyres required for the VFR

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Kamikaze Bob
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Joined: 27 Apr 2011
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PostPosted: 00:07 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Tyres required for the VFR Reply with quote

Bought the bike in October, running Pirelli Angel GT's front and rear, the rear was squaring off a wee bit. I've been riding almost daily to/from work with little recreation time in between due to the missus working. Eeeked out time last night and went a run with my instructor who hadn't seen the bike yet, and his first comments were along the lines of "you need new tyres". I knew they would need done this year, but regular mileage has worn them quicker that I thought, closer inspection proves him correct.

Been looking online in between bouts of work, and there are a few options out there. I ride daily (thinking of getting rid of the car as it does nowt these days) and in all weathers so need tyres that will give good grip in the wet and last a decent amount of time given the amount of riding I do.

Thought about BT023s, and going with the Angel GTs again, but looking today I'm not intrigued by the Pilot Road 2 and 3 from Michelin and a few others. Any suggestions on what rubber I should get for the summer?

TL;DR - need new rubber, give me some hints
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Musketeer
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PostPosted: 07:07 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm pretty sure you need the round ones.

Try Michelin Pilot Road 4 - excellent wet grip, longevity, and enough dry grip for 99% of riders.
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raesewell
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PostPosted: 07:47 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Take a look at Avon Storm 2 Ultra. I luv em
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 12:23 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I had some conti road attacks on my 750 a while back which stood up to mileage very well, didn't square too quickly on motorways and weren't the worst I've had for handling by a long chalk.

Another option is to take advantage of having a single sided swingarm, get a second rear wheel off ebay and have a commuting and a sports tyre. Takes next to no time to swap over. 4 nuts dcepending on your exhaust setup. That's what I did.

I currently have metzeler M7RR tyres on my VFR750. I'm impressed. Not sure how well they'd stand up to commuting though. Excellent in the wet.
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ADSrox0r
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PostPosted: 13:15 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm on BT023s for now, apparently they're obsolete and T30s are the replacement. That's what I'll be putting on next, can't fault them at all.
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Musketeer
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PostPosted: 13:37 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:

I currently have metzeler M7RR tyres on my VFR750. I'm impressed.


Many people seem to say good things about M7RR. But Pilot Road 4 last longer.
M7RR is often compared to Pilot Power 3, but I'm not convinced it's the same league. M7RR is U shaped, Pilot Power 3 is V shaped.

I will be looking for some road rubbers soon. I ride only in nice weather these days. After 3 sets of Pilot Power 3 I think there is now something more suitable for me - new Michelin Power Supersport Evo.
Anybody on here have tested them yet? Or will I be the first? Razz
Supersport Evo seems like more dry version of Pilot Power 3 - more contact patch/less grooved, same compounds, same 2CT/2CT+ technology, ACT added.

https://i37.photobucket.com/albums/e85/motorcyclesJZ/Random2/sport_comparo_zpsoyzpxnxx.jpg
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robertw95
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PostPosted: 22:42 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd recomend pr3, 10k out a front and it's only just squaring off. Had lots of people try the 4 and end up going back to the 3 for better feel as its softer. Never had any slips and wet and I've rode pretty hard in horrendous conditions.
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robertw95
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PostPosted: 22:42 - 27 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd recomend pr3, 10k out a front and it's only just squaring off. Had lots of people try the 4 and end up going back to the 3 for better feel as its softer. Never had any slips and wet and I've rode pretty hard in horrendous conditions.
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Kamikaze Bob
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PostPosted: 07:16 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the responses guys. Spent a few days looking at various reviews, etc. and opted for the PR3's, bought from Tyreleader (got the site from a previous thread on here, thanks again) for £158 delivered, and BanditsHigh is gonna fit them.

Missus isn't too pleased tho....
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arry
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PostPosted: 07:37 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Good choice. Mine have lasted well and not squared off particularly. And they do grip well, with good feel.

They replaced the BT021's the bike came on - I really disliked the Bridgestones
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grr666
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PostPosted: 07:55 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Kamikaze Bob wrote:


Missus isn't too pleased tho....

I find safety related items the easiest with which to obtain 'wife approved' status.
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ADSrox0r
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PostPosted: 08:23 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I find 'shit I ordered that she doesn't need to know about' the easiest way to get wife-approval.
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grr666
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PostPosted: 08:50 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wish I could, our finances are way too intertwined.
Makes getting my hands on one of those funky light up Shark helmets a bit tricky. Laughing It's the answer to
'So why can't you just use the perfectly safe and an undamaged one we've already spend £300 on then?
That I'm struggling with if I'm honest, Laughing

Thing is, I'm certain 'Duh! Because it looks like Tron! Obviously!' (a bit... well... Maybe not then...
but in my head it does anyway...)
is going not going to fly far with my fairer half. Folded arms If only there was a safety angle.... Thinking
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Rogue_Shadow
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PostPosted: 09:55 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

On the same sort of subject.

My rear tyre is due a replacement and I'm dead certain on replacing it with a PR3.

Do you guys simply take your bike in for the tyre change over, or do you prefer to remove the rear wheel and take it in separate?

Cheers
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arry
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PostPosted: 11:15 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's about 25 quid extra to ride in ride out with front and back tyre changes where I go, so for that money in don't mess about
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johnsmith222
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PostPosted: 14:02 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rogue_Shadow wrote:
On the same sort of subject.

My rear tyre is due a replacement and I'm dead certain on replacing it with a PR3.

Do you guys simply take your bike in for the tyre change over, or do you prefer to remove the rear wheel and take it in separate?

Cheers


It's always worth taking the wheel off as the price for fitting is a large% extra on top of the price of the tyre.

Or you can do what I do and fit them yourself.
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Musketeer
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PostPosted: 14:19 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

My local garage charges £13 per wheel for tyre change if you bring just the wheels... or... £26 per wheel if they have to remove the wheels from your bike. Either way it's a rip-off for 10 minute job.
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robertw95
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PostPosted: 15:20 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I change tyres myself, what I will say is those pr3's are hard work to remove and fit, track bikes nice soft tyres are much easier to do took half an hour longer removing and fitting the new front! Rolling Eyes
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arry
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PostPosted: 15:23 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

It never ceases to amaze me how tight motorcyclists can be for the sake of small beer money Laughing
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johnsmith222
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PostPosted: 20:24 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

arry wrote:
It never ceases to amaze me how tight motorcyclists can be for the sake of small beer money Laughing


£25 for fitting, plus a potential saving of probably up to £30 for ordering tyres online, as well as not having my rims scratched isn't beer money.

Or it could be MORE beer money. Cool Laughing

Plus potential to fit tyres for others. Also forgetting the money saved by doing absolutely everything else that needs done to the bike rather than paying a bike shop good money to do it, when it can be used for beer. Cool

Although, to be fair, I don't drink any more so for me it goes towards petrol money.
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Kamikaze Bob
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PostPosted: 22:41 - 29 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

grr666 wrote:
Kamikaze Bob wrote:


Missus isn't too pleased tho....

I find safety related items the easiest with which to obtain 'wife approved' status.
Well that was the only reason I'm getting them to be honest. The rear was slightly squared when I bought it in October but I figured it would be okay for a while. After looking closely at the front and showing the wife, she agreed I would need new rubber.
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Musketeer
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PostPosted: 08:40 - 30 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Kamikaze Bob: Missus isn't too pleased tho....

grr666: I find safety related items the easiest with which to obtain 'wife approved' status.

Kamikaze Bob: Well that was the only reason I'm getting them to be honest. The rear was slightly squared when I bought it in October but I figured it would be okay for a while. After looking closely at the front and showing the wife, she agreed I would need new rubber.


I presume you're unemployed stay home husband and you need you wife's approval and money to get anything. Otherwise I don't see a point in involving women in your money being spent on bikes. Get a job and feel like a man again.
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Kamikaze Bob
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PostPosted: 13:32 - 30 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

More to do with a limited income and just having moved house meaning every penny's a prisoner just now. But given I use the bike to go to work every week it helped push my point
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