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Looking for new front tires - anyone tried 155/60/15?

fatboy

Member
looking for new front tires has anyone tried 155/60/15 getting very hard to find 165/55/15
 
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looking for new front tires has anyone tried 155/60/15 getting very hard to find 165/55/15

Yokohama AVID 175/55R15

And they will likely be the last set of fronts you will need on the bike.....

Mine just clicked over 75,000 miles and still look good. Will get replaced at 8yrs but will not be worn out.
 
looking for new front tires has anyone tried 155/60/15 getting very hard to find 165/55/15

This might help, I am running 165/60/R15 and I have Continental's Contiprocontact's. These were installed on 6/24/2016 at the time my spyder had 12,807 miles.

The OEM's were change at 12,807. The current mileage on my spyder is 30,400.

Current mileage on tire are : 17,593. I have 2014 RTS-SE6.


What year is your spyder?

What spyder model do you have?

Deanna
 
We have been putting on the 165/60/15 and 175/55/15 Vredestein Quatrac tires. Customers are extremely happy with them and they test out well for wet and dry traction and stopping distance. They may not last as long as other options. We don't know yet. Typically, you will trade traction for longevity or vise-versa. But I am happy to trade some longevity for additional traction. Especially in wet conditions.

Most are getting the 175/55/15. Same diameter and about 3/8" wider tire.

For the rear, I believe the Kumho is about the only aftermarket tire you can get in the OEM 225/50/15 size anymore. But frankly, the Kumho is not a great tire. Wet traction is fair at best and even dry traction suffers as they near the end of life.

The General Altimax 43 & 45 test out better than the Kumho in both wet and dry conditions (as do other options mentioned). It is a 215/60/15 which is a bit taller than OEM (giving you a more accurate speedometer) and about 3/8" narrower than OEM. Unfortunately, the Veredestein comes only in a 205/60/15 which is a bit shorter than the Altimax, but still taller than OEM. It is an additional 3/8" narrower than the Altimax, (3/4" total narrower then OEM). However, another factor to consider is that at freeway speeds, the OEM Kenda is putting down only about 3"-3.5" of rubber on the road. This is why they wear out in the center. Reducing air pressure does little to correct this as the tread plies are simply too weak to maintain a flat surface against centrifugal force.

Even with the narrower Vredestein, you'll be getting about 8" of tire on the road surface at all times. This is what the Vredestein looks like.

Veredestien Quatrac.jpg

Typically, a directional tire is better in wet conditions than a non-directional tire. With the tendency of the Spyder to hydroplane, especially in the rear, I like a water shedding tire.

There are some 225/60/15 tires that would probably work well. But also probably too tall as they would be about 1.7" taller than the OEM. Or about 3/4" closer to hard parts than OEM.

There are better tires out there than any so far mentioned. But none of them come in sizes that will fit our Spyder
 
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:agree: with Ron's post #8 ...... But concerning " tire width " and traction, remember the Spyders ALL have traction control., and the VSS is going to be the determining factor no matter what width the tire is. In fact a Stickier Wide tire is likely to Trigger the Nanny sooner. In the wet a narrower rear tire is likely to be a tad better. A wider tire may look better to some folks, and high horsepower drag race veh's are about the only veh's that truly benefit from them ..... Mike :thumbup:
 
:agree: with Ron's post #8 ...... But concerning " tire width " and traction, remember the Spyders ALL have traction control., and the VSS is going to be the determining factor no matter what width the tire is. In fact a Stickier Wide tire is likely to Trigger the Nanny sooner. In the wet a narrower rear tire is likely to be a tad better. A wider tire may look better to some folks, and high horsepower drag race veh's are about the only veh's that truly benefit from them ..... Mike :thumbup:

Good points...
 
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