Running a 215/60 on a RS
I'm borrowing a 2013 RS that has just under 24k on it. I had knee surgery about 8 weeks ago (torn ACL replaced) and although I normally ride 2 wheelers, in order to keep my wife and Dr happy, I agreed to stay off the 2 wheelers for a bit to let my knee heal and not re-injure it. (I tore my ACL on my dual sport motorcycle on March 1st). I'm a very avid rider though so staying off a bike was killing me. A friend that owns the RS just had back surgery so I knew she'd be off her Spyder for awhile and I made a deal with her to do some maintenance, put on a new rear tire, and a few other things her Spyder needs, in exchange for borrowing it for a bit while she heals up. She'll get a Spyder back in tip top shape ready to ride and I'll have gotten to enjoy riding without the risk of re-injuring my knee for awhile.
So anyway, I knew the rear tire needed to be replaced before I picked it up last week, but it was worse than I expected. I rode it the hour home from her house, but that was going to be it until I ordered a new tire. Through posts on this forum, I found that the Kumho Ecsta (225/50-15) was a popular choice and for $81 shipped to my door, it sure sounded better than the stock Kenda tire at more than double the price. However, that Kumho tire still wasn't due in until the next week and Memorial Day Weekend was coming up with beautiful weather and I wanted to ride.
So last Saturday, I stopped by a couple local tire stores that sell used tires to see what they might have. The 1st one said used 15 tires in general were hard to come by, but the 2nd store I lucked out and found a 215/60-15 tire in really good shape. I had seen others had had great luck with this size tire and for $30 I decided to give it a shot. The used tire was actually in pretty good shape so it would last a bit and even better, it would get me on the Spyder that weekend so I could enjoy some riding over the long holiday weekend.
So this was the stock Kenda tire that was pretty much shot when I brought it home. I think she said it had about 10k miles on it, but it was pretty much gone long before this and it looks like she was running too much air pressure since the middle is gone and the edge still looked pretty good.
This was the used tire I put on. I don't even remember what brand it was, but I guess it's more of a luxury car type tire. I didn't expect this tire to be that great, but it's actually working pretty good. It's not that aggressive of a tire, but I had a chance to take the Spyder to some twisty roads and it did great. I've also found myself in rain a couple times already and it's doing real well there too. As others have said, the nice thing about the 215/60 size is it makes the speedo almost dead on. If this was my Spyder, I probably would have just ordered a 215/60 tire instead of the Kumho, but at the time I ordered it, I was a bit nervous about trying a non stock size tire on a Spyder that wasn't mine and being stuck with a tire that didn't work. The used tire was a cheap way to experiment and I'm so glad it works.
BTW, the Kumho came in today and it looks great. I can't wait to put that on. The good thing is though I can pretty much wear out this used tire without feeling guilty and return the Spyder with a brand new Kumho tire on it when my friend is ready to ride again. At 24k her front tires are still looking pretty good too.
Here's the Kumho
Oh yeah, this was my first time changing a Spyder tire. It actually wasn't as bad as I expected getting the wheel off and changing the Car Tire on my No Mar Tire change was actually a piece of cake. The hardest part of the actual tire change was breaking the bead on the old tire just due to the fact the tire was a lot wider than a MC tire and the angle of the breaker was kind of off. I also was able to see that the belt alignment was off originally and get that to line up straight. I ordered a belt tensioner thing so I could verify i had the correct tension too. Overall, the experience was pretty similar to adjusting and setting up a chain on my street bikes.
I'm tall 6'4", so the more aggressive riding position of the RS isn't all that comfortable for my long legs if I ride for a good bit, but I'm not complaining. I've had a chance to ride the new F3's, which I love, but I have a pretty full garage already. haha. We have a older couple that comes to our bike night each week that ride a Spyder RT. They first had a 2012 RT and now own a 2014 RT, so I've been around Spyders for a bit. I really do like that new 1330 engine, but the RS is keeping me happy and I actually enjoy that it's the SM5 model.