:agree:100% I was able to get about 11k on my F3T, but only managed 8k on my RT. They were both way beyond where your wear level is. I think you are good for another 2-3k.If you got 10,300 miles out of a stock tire consider yourself lucky. I'd say most people don't get more than 8,000. My current rear tire looks about like yours and it only has about 5,000 miles on it. If it were me I'd keep running that tire for a while. I bet you could squeeze another couple thousand miles out of it.
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This is what my stock rear Kenda tire looks like at 10300 miles. I've had my 2015 F3 since July 2016. You can see the tire worn down to the wear bars in the middle. The sides are still good. I think the tire has some more life in it, but I'm not sure about how much.
Deer, those bars you can see in the centre two grooves that the tread has worn down to in your picture aren't the wear bars!! They are 'breaker bars' intended to stabilise the tread & break any ice or water caught in those channels up so that it'll clear the grooves for the water/ice the grooves will pick up on the next rotation. But don't feel bad, LOTS of people get caught by looking at the wrong bars like that! :shocked:
If you look closely at the sidewalls of the tire, right in the edges of the tread moulding, you'll see a little triangle embossed in the rubber with the top pointing at the bars you can just see in those same grooves at the bottom of your pic just above the shadow line - THEY ARE the wear bars!! If you can't see the triangles or some other clear 'tread wear' indicator OR if the bars start out with parallel lines embossed across their tops (but you've gotta check for that before the wear gets that far down) then the bars you've found aren't the Tread Wear indicators, and as mentioned above, I'm pretty certain those you are looking at ARE NOT the tread wear bars; cos the tread wear bars are clearly visible in the lower part of y our pic! However, once the surrounding tread has worn down to the top of ANY of the real tread wear bars, even tho it might look like there might be some life left or the other tread wear bars haven't been reached yet, there really isn't any safe or legal life left in that tire and if you value your life & your Spyder, you should swap the tire out immediately or a bit sooner!! :lecturef_smilie:
So going by your pic, it really does look like there's at least a couple of thousand miles left in your rear tire!! But it will tend to wear that last bit fairly quickly tho! However, you are doing wellin the wear stakes, I didn't get anywhere near even half your milage from the Origjjnal Kenda rear on my RT; but then I guess the F3 is somewhat lighter on the rear tire than a 'usually loaded' & pillion carrying RT, plus your part of the world doesn't usually experience the higher ambient temps & therefore road surface temps that we get here Down Under. Still, you have done well, but I reckon that regardless, you'd still be very pleased with the better ride & handling you'd get from a good Passenger tire running at the right pressure for the load placed upon it! And it'd almost certainly last longer & likely cost you less than a replacement OE Kenda tire too! :thumbup:
Something to bear in mind.....![]()
The difference between your tire & canamjhb's tire is probably only a few thousand miles at best... :sour:
FYI My rear tire looked OK and similar to the OPs. After riding two 500 mile days, I took the picture posted and had it replaced while on a road trip. Went from OK to waisted in very short order.....
FYI My rear tire looked OK and similar to the OPs. After riding two 500 mile days, I took the picture posted and had it replaced while on a road trip. Went from OK to waisted in very short order.....
I have consistently got over 15K on OEM Kendas. One exception, the 2014 pooped out at 8,900. I have well over 15K on my 2014 with the newest tire......
Ak, I reckon that your 'better wear than most' has a LOT to do with the ambient road surface temps - which I suspect are often a fair bit colder'n most experience!?!
Yeah canamjhb, as you, me, & others like Morturf have already discovered, that last bit of tread wear on any tire, and especially on the OE Spyder spec Kendas can disappear bloody fast!! :shocked:
Ak, I reckon that your 'better wear than most' has a LOT to do with the ambient road surface temps - which I suspect are often a fair bit colder'n most experience!?! Talking about tires in general, colder road surface temps often mean measurably less & slower tread wear, even when the tire is running at its optimal temp; and of course, the opposite usually applies too - hotter road surface temps generally means more & faster tread wear, even when the tire is running at its optimal temp! The OE Spyder spec Kendas tend to have an even greater tendency for this to apply due to their lightweight construction & the 'ballooning' properties of the spinning tire, as well as their tread compound layering profile, so it's not all that surprising that you do fairly well with the Kendas on Alaskan roads. But let's leave it at that, I really don't want to get too heavily into discussing the complexities of tread wear science & how the various tread compounds used can wear differently with different road surface temps and tire operating temps & pressures... that's a headache inducing thing at the best of times!pps: