WaltH
Senior Member
Many of us have experienced excessive wear on the inboard side of the front tires on the GS/RS Spyders. On my first Spyder the unusual wear pattern was apparent before 30,000 miles. When the Spyder died at 36,500 miles, the excessive wear on the inboard side of both tires was very pronounced. On my second Spyder, the same thing happened. I had to replace the front tires at 34,000 miles because the inboard one-half of the tires was no longer safe. I had two different Spyders with the same problem.
On the second Spyder, I replaced the OEM tires with automobile tires. I am using Sumitomo HTR 200 (175/65R14). With 33,000 miles on the new tires, the wear pattern is perfectly even. There is no unusual wear what-so-ever (see pictures below). Other than normal wear and tear, there have been no changes to the Spyder, or to my riding habits.
In my case, the mystery is solved. It is not the machine that causes the problem. It is the low quality OEM tires. Excessive inboard wear goes away with the change to automobile tires. I will post pictures of the Sumitomo tires when they are ultimately replaced.
My rear tires have been BF Goodrich G-Force tires for some time now. I just installed my fourth one. The one it replaced had 22,700 miles (see pictures below). The old tire is on the left, and the new tire is on the right. I would not have replaced the old one just yet, but I am going on a major trip in September.
Under normal circumstances the old tire would have had more miles, but I have not been riding for the past six weeks. It has been just too hot in southern Florida. Never before have I given up riding because it was too hot. I didn’t ride for three weeks last winter because it was too cold in southern Florida. Maybe I am just getting too old for this climate. The only reason I live in Florida is so that I can ride year-around. It doesn’t seem to be working out as well as it has in the past.
On the second Spyder, I replaced the OEM tires with automobile tires. I am using Sumitomo HTR 200 (175/65R14). With 33,000 miles on the new tires, the wear pattern is perfectly even. There is no unusual wear what-so-ever (see pictures below). Other than normal wear and tear, there have been no changes to the Spyder, or to my riding habits.
In my case, the mystery is solved. It is not the machine that causes the problem. It is the low quality OEM tires. Excessive inboard wear goes away with the change to automobile tires. I will post pictures of the Sumitomo tires when they are ultimately replaced.
My rear tires have been BF Goodrich G-Force tires for some time now. I just installed my fourth one. The one it replaced had 22,700 miles (see pictures below). The old tire is on the left, and the new tire is on the right. I would not have replaced the old one just yet, but I am going on a major trip in September.
Under normal circumstances the old tire would have had more miles, but I have not been riding for the past six weeks. It has been just too hot in southern Florida. Never before have I given up riding because it was too hot. I didn’t ride for three weeks last winter because it was too cold in southern Florida. Maybe I am just getting too old for this climate. The only reason I live in Florida is so that I can ride year-around. It doesn’t seem to be working out as well as it has in the past.