Peter, if it's " Scrubbing " ..... WHY , what's causing this ....my belt moves back and forth on the sprocket constantly .... And I don't have un-even wear ...it has been reported some engines weren't ALIGNED perfectly ...... Also too high a psi won't imho cause UN-EVEN tire wear - it would be the same across the footprint ....... Mike :thumbup:
I think it hasta be TWO problems Mike - the easy one being the first, the high tire pressure that's causing the 'centre' of the tread to wear more than the edges.... only that's skewed just a little bit by the 'other' problem! And the second problem being the uneven wear/scrubbing issue, that's a little more difficult, and yeah, SpyderAnn is probably the best person to ask about that one!! :dontknow:
But if the rear tire is slightly off parallel with the bike frame doesn't the laser alignment process compensate for that? I thought after the laser alignment is completed the bike will track straight with respect to the three wheels but the bike frame might be slightly off parallel with respect to the line of travel.
You are basically right IMS, and the only things I can think of that
might be causing this 'abnormal wear issue' are that 1). the tire hasn't been mounted properly on the rim - the LHS bead is possibly seated a bit 'higher' on the rim than the other side... something that can occur during mounting if the technician doesn't use/get quite enough free air flow when inflating to 'bead seating' pressure & doesn't give the tread a few whacks with a mallet or tire lever to help pop the bead down into its seat properly &/or then check that the bead is seated correctly, but this is usually 'fixed' pretty much as soon as the tire starts carrying the weight of a car - as the weight goes on it generally 'pops' the bead back down into its seat properly as soon as the tire does its first rotation under load, only maybe in this instance the weight of the Spyder hasn't been sufficient to do this?? :dontknow

r 2). was the laser alignment done
before that particular rear tire was put on & the axle 'aligned' during tire replacement? That other earlier tire tread wear pic didn't look skewed like this latest one, so has the rear axle alignment been 'crossed up' just a bit
since the laser alignment occured?!? There'd hafta be some signs elsewhere tho, maybe the bars not quite aligned with 'straight ahead', or the front tires feathering just a tiny amount on the LHS of their tread?? I dunno if that'd really do it tho, not without physically checking the actual vehicle & mounting etc out personally, I'm sorta clutching at straws here - SpyderAnn may be able to offer something more substantial??? or 3) possibly the tire construction isn't quite as 'even' as it normally is on Passenger tires, with the tread band laid onto the carcass marginally off centre?!? OK, Not really
all that likely, altho it
IS theoretically possible - just look how many of the Kenda tires that get onto the streets with construction 'defects' like that that've slipped thru
their quality control!! So one in a million slipping thru from Cooper isn't anywhere near as bad, is it??? I'd still be asking SpyderAnn, or having a very up close & personal look at the tire, rim, axle alignment, wheel bearings, belt tension, road camber, swing arm alignment, swing arm bearing, etc to see if there was
any indication as to
why that particular tire was wearing like that?!? If it wasn't quite so fiddly to do, I'd suggest flipping that tire on its rim & running it the other way for a bit to see if it made ANY difference in the wear pattern - but it'd be a right pain doing that for potentially very little gain!?! :gaah: