The New And Improved Unofficial R65 Forum V2

General Category => Chit-Chat => Topic started by: ray on November 08, 2010, 11:10:11 AM

Title: Rain Tires
Post by: ray on November 08, 2010, 11:10:11 AM
I am looking for advice and opinions. So I know that I've come to the right place. And hoping that I haven't bitten off more than I can chew.
I have recently relocated from sunny Southern California to not so sunny Washington State. Just about 15 miles south of Olympia. I own a 1982 R65LS which is in need of new shoes. And could definitely use the aforementioned a-and-o concerning tires for my area. I am guessing that sandals will no longer be the hot set-up. Two lane country roads are now the soup-of the-day and hydroplaning not a good thing.
One other thing, after six decades in So Cal what the heck is 'winterizing a bike'?
I await the onslaught with fear and trepidation. And I thank (I think) everyone in advance.      :-/
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: DanielMc on November 08, 2010, 11:29:14 AM
Over on this side of the pond the weather is normally windswept, cold, gray and wet, often all at once. I've fitted Bridgestone BT45s to three airheads now and I rate these tyres highly - they give great grip and are surefooted in the wet.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: luxlogs on November 08, 2010, 02:39:37 PM
Good Question

Awaiting replies as well being that Chicago weather is Crap too.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Ed Miller on November 08, 2010, 03:01:57 PM
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Over on this side of the pond the weather is normally windswept, cold, gray and wet, often all at once. I've fitted Bridgestone BT45s to three airheads now and I rate these tyres highly - they give great grip and are surefooted in the wet.

What year is your R65 and what size front are you using for the BT45?  I've been thinking of experimenting with them for my next set, to see if I get more miles than I do from the S11 Spitfires that I've been using.

Ray, winterizing my R65 means wearing my Olympia Phantom one piece suit, which is water proof.  I've never had problems hydroplaning on wet pavement with my Sptifires, or any other motorcycle tire that I can remember.  We can ride year round here, though it's not always fun.  (I'm in Western Oregon, in case I don't have it in my signature.)
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: ray on November 08, 2010, 03:11:18 PM
Quote
Over on this side of the pond the weather is normally windswept, cold, gray and wet, often all at once. I've fitted Bridgestone BT45s to three airheads now and I rate these tyres highly - they give great grip and are surefooted in the wet.

Thanks DanielMc, for your reply from across the pond. Sounds as though your weather is identical to mine.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: ray on November 08, 2010, 03:20:16 PM
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Good Question

Awaiting replies as well being that Chicago weather is Crap too.

Looked up the BT45s on Bike Bandit. They are talking about $80-$85 per tire. Pretty inexpensive for good tires. Can't wait to get more input.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: ray on November 08, 2010, 03:29:08 PM
Quote
Quote
Over on this side of the pond the weather is normally windswept, cold, gray and wet, often all at once. I've fitted Bridgestone BT45s to three airheads now and I rate these tyres highly - they give great grip and are surefooted in the wet.

What year is your R65 and what size front are you using for the BT45?  I've been thinking of experimenting with them for my next set, to see if I get more miles than I do from the S11 Spitfires that I've been using.

Ray, winterizing my R65 means wearing my Olympia Phantom one piece suit, which is water proof.  I've never had problems hydroplaning on wet pavement with my Sptifires, or any other motorcycle tire that I can remember.  We can ride year round here, though it's not always fun.  (I'm in Western Oregon, in case I don't have it in my signature.)

Thank you Ed. I can tell by the weather today that a good, warm and waterproof suit is in my future. Care to give up an inside line on an economical place to purchase one?
Also, it sounds like the S11 Spitfires are also a good tire.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: ray on November 08, 2010, 03:39:11 PM
Any one have any insight on the Avon Rear AM26 Roadrider?
I would think the British know a thing or two about wet weather tires.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: DanielMc on November 08, 2010, 05:24:43 PM
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What year is your R65 and what size front are you using for the BT45?  I've been thinking of experimenting with them for my next set, to see if I get more miles than I do from the S11 Spitfires that I've been using.

My R65 is an LS and is an '82 model. Bridgestone recommend a 90/90 18 front running at 2.5 Bar and a 4.00 18 running at 2.8 Bar on the LS but suggest using a 120/90 18 on the rear if you have the regular R65.

Quote
Any one have any insight on the Avon Rear AM26 Roadrider?
I would think the British know a thing or two about wet weather tires.

The Avon Roadrider has a good following over here and a friend who fitted them to his R100RS has nothing but praise for them. I haven't tried them myself.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Ed Miller on November 09, 2010, 11:01:46 AM
Here's the suit I have:

http://www.olympiamotosports.com/phantom/phantom.htm

Mine is the hi-viz yellow version for cruddy gray foggy rainy dark weather.  It has leaked a little bit a couple of times, when riding in hard rain combined with high winds from the side.  My Windjammer on my R65 protects well, but not from side winds.  This suit is about 400 bucks, maybe Firstgear sells one for less.  Or pants/jacket combos can be just as waterproof.  In fact, Aerostich says their Darion two piece set is more waterproof than their Roadcrafter one piece:

http://www.aerostich.com/aerostich-suits

I rode all last winter without even putting the liner in my suit and don't have it in yet.  My commute is almost 50 miles one way.  I wear a polar fleece jacket under the suit.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: nhmaf on November 09, 2010, 03:04:00 PM
I don't do a huge amount of wet weather riding on my R65LS, but since I put the BT45 tires on her I've been very confident of the grip wet or dry.  I'm running 100/90 on the front, 110/90 on the rear.
You could go with the 90/90 on the front tire, but I find that the bike already turns in quickly enough and the 100/90 give it just a little bit more straightline stability on the interstate.

Here in the northeast, most folks do have to witnerize their bike - there are the odd few who keep their bikes in operational status for the rare 1 day per month when the temps might be above 0 F and the roads clear for riding, and the few Ural/sidecar riders who take it as a personal challenge to ride through snow.   But, I don't like getting all that highly corrosive road salt and crud powerpacked into every cranny of my bike where it can fester and rust..   Barring snow covered roads beforehand, I usually ride until thanksgiving or so, then give it up until March.. change the oil, block up the bikes, plug the places mice and chipmunks will get in, drain the tanks, bring them inside with the batteries and put the batteries on the tender, etc.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: DanielMc on November 10, 2010, 08:48:16 AM
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I'm running 100/90 on the front, 110/90 on the rear.
You could go with the 90/90 on the front tire, but I find that the bike already turns in quickly enough and the 100/90 give it just a little bit more straightline stability on the interstate.

Looks like your combination raises the front by about 10mm and drops the rear by a similar amount. Over here in the UK fitting a 100/90 BT45 to the front of an R65 would breach European regulations on recommended tyre fitment.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: nhmaf on November 11, 2010, 04:24:07 PM
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Quote
I'm running 100/90 on the front, 110/90 on the rear.
You could go with the 90/90 on the front tire, but I find that the bike already turns in quickly enough and the 100/90 give it just a little bit more straightline stability on the interstate.

Looks like your combination raises the front by about 10mm and drops the rear by a similar amount. Over here in the UK fitting a 100/90 BT45 to the front of an R65 would breach European regulations on recommended tyre fitment.

It might be slightly different from the original 3.25 and 4.00 OEM tires, but I don't think that it is 10mm different.   The tire sizes "100/90" for example, are a ratio of the height and width dimensions, but are not absolute numbers or measurements.   One can get (2) 100/90 x18 tires (or tyres) from different mfgrs and measure them to have both different "heights" and different "widths", by as much as several millimeters, but the numeric ratios of each mfgr tire will still essentially meet the "100/90" fraction/ratio... this is a common misunderstanding with 'metric' motorcycle tire sizes.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: DanielMc on November 11, 2010, 04:56:27 PM
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It might be slightly different from the original 3.25 and 4.00 OEM tires, but I don't think that it is 10mm different.   The tire sizes "100/90" for example, are a ratio of the height and width dimensions, but are not absolute numbers or measurements.   One can get (2) 100/90 x18 tires (or tyres) from different mfgrs and measure them to have both different "heights" and different "widths", by as much as several millimeters, but the numeric ratios of each mfgr tire will still essentially meet the "100/90" fraction/ratio... this is a common misunderstanding with 'metric' motorcycle tire sizes.

I agree that different manufacturers' tyres will not necessarily be identical in size despite claiming similar aspect ratios. However I was comparing like with like - Bridgestone's own figures give the 90/90 as being 622mm in diameter and their 100/90 as being 642mm in diameter - a difference of 20mm which will give a 10mm increase in ride height at the front. Also the nominal rim width recommended for the 100/90 BT45 is 2.5 so pulling one onto the R65's skinny 1.85 rim is even more likely to add to the ride height (and reduce the contact patch) albeit by a very small margin.

Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: nhmaf on November 11, 2010, 07:40:16 PM
The 110/90 REAR tire mounts on the REAR wheel, which is 2.5" for the regular snowflake wheels, and the LS wheels are as wide or slightly wider than the snowflakes, so it is perfectly fine to mount on the rear as I've done/recommended.  The front snowflake rim is 1.85", which is fine for the 90/90 tire.   I agree that the 100/90 tire is a little bit squeezed in comparison to the 90/90 on the front, but I've not observed any ill handling effects and chassis geometry appears as it was with ancient imperial unit metzlers on them.   Perhaps since the 110/90 tire on the rear is also slightly taller than a 4.00 tire, the net effect on the steering geometry/angle is essentially nil - the front and rear tires being slightly taller than their nearest imperial equivalents.

I may try a 90/90 front tire on my next round of tires to see if there is a noticeable difference in handling with the same BT45 model tire - there certainly aren't any clearance, wear, or traction issues that I have experienced with the 100/90 on front thus far, though as I suspect, the larger, heavier tire will provide a slight increase in gyroscopic effect and slightly slow the steering response.  IMHO, the R65 can turn in  quite nicely as it is, and a slight increase to its high speed interstate road stability is a plus, for my uses.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Ed Miller on November 13, 2010, 11:22:36 AM
"I'm running 100/90 on the front, 110/90 on the rear."

Where do you find them in that size for the front?  I didn't see them in the usual on line tire stores.  That's the size Spitfire that I use.
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Darwin_R65 on November 13, 2010, 08:02:27 PM
I'm running 100/90 front and 110/90 rear in a bridgestone BT45
Replaced the classic michelins, and the bike handles so incredibly different it's amazing. IT leans and feels very nimble now. I have only ridden in light Darwin rain but the tyres felt very good. (Light Darwin rain = heavy Melbourne rain,  we can get 200mm/hour at times here in tropics)

Theres about 5mm between the swingarm and the tyre, I wouldn't want to try the 120/90 on the rear I don't think there would be room.

My bikes '81, twin shock.

John
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: nhmaf on November 13, 2010, 09:26:19 PM
I'm not sure where I got my last set from - I think it might have been SWmoto tires or bike bandit, or one of the distributors that my local independent bike shop uses - I gotta help support him when I can..
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Crossrodes on November 14, 2010, 09:14:56 AM
Rayrope I live a little North of you on Vancouver Island.  What I use for wet weather riding are Frogtoggs.  It is a lightweight riding suit that is breathable.  You will like this if you do not want to wear a wet riding suit on a trip when the weather clears up.  Like I said it is breathable but it also cuts the wind.  I don't usually ride much up here after October but as you will often ride into dicey weather up here at any time of the year Frogtoggs are a good choice to carry with you.  They are lightweight and don't take much room in the saddlebag.

Here's the link:

http://www.froggtoggs.com/
Title: Re: Rain Tires
Post by: Ed Miller on November 14, 2010, 07:13:10 PM
I have Froggtoggs, and use the jacket for my normal jacket around here (with fleece under if it actually gets cold) but oddly I've never used them for anything but windbreakers for when I'm riding in my armored mesh in chilly weather.  I've never got wet in the jacket  though.   Maybe if I decide to try my idea of bicycling to Dallas, OR and catching a bus to work, I'll try them out.