I am having the same problem,I have 30psi in my rear tire and it is wearing in the middle.I hope someone has an answer.:agree:
--------------but isn't better to have the tire wear down the middle than on either side?????????-----SSSS
My manual and the one one this site shows a MIN of 26 and MAX of 30.I don't know if it makes any different but my book shows the Rear to be 28 psi. I've kept mine right at 28 psi and it seems to be wearing evenly. I am just over 6,000 miles. Would the 2 psi really make that much of difference?
- Larry :spyder:
While researching tires in preparation for buying a new rear tire for the Spyder, I read that some wide, low profile tires have a tendency to wear more in the center of the tread than on the edges even when properly inflated.
That was my understanding, too. I have also been told that the rim width vs. tire width has a lot of effect on how the tire wears with a belted tire. Belted tires tend to run quite flat on the road, even at varying pressures.While researching tires in preparation for buying a new rear tire for the Spyder, I read that some wide, low profile tires have a tendency to wear more in the center of the tread than on the edges even when properly inflated.
Actually, Dudley, that's not so far fetched. The stiffer construction of a regular tire, the thicker tread, and the flatness of the belt are supposed to try to overcome this natural tendency. That's Basic Tire Design 101. Like everything in the world, nothing is perfect, however, and it still could happen to some extent, varying from tire to tire. Fortunately for a car or a Spyder, the tires are smaller diameter, turn at a slower rpm, and a street vehicle is geared lower, so there is less tendency for centrifugal force to distort the tire.Here is a question that's been bugging me and may be all stupid and off the wall. For all you car jockies and dragster inthusiasts...when a dragster heats up his tires before a race, the centrifugal force of the tire spinning causes the tire to rise. With the light weight of the Spyder, could it be that, undetectable by the human eye, the tire could be running more in the center because the centrifugal force is doing the same thing in a much smaller scale and causing the center to wear out sooner? Don't laugh too hard!:dontknow:
Actually, Dudley, that's not so far fetched. The stiffer construction of a regular tire, the thicker tread, and the flatness of the belt are supposed to try to overcome this natural tendency. That's Basic Tire Design 101. Like everything in the world, nothing is perfect, however, and it still could happen to some extent, varying from tire to tire. Fortunately for a car or a Spyder, the tires are smaller diameter, turn at a slower rpm, and a street vehicle is geared lower, so there is less tendency for centrifugal force to distort the tire.
-Scotty