Motorcycle Tire Buying Tips (and 8 Tires to Try)

Some riders like to justify their hobby to non-riders by bragging that motorcycles are cheaper to ride and maintain than cars. But it doesn’t take too long to discover the flaw in that argument—tires. Unless you’re a hopeless farkle addict, tires probably represent the biggest ongoing expense of motorcycling. While the tires on your car might last 50,000 miles, the ones on your bike might give up the ghost in a fraction of that distance. That makes buying the right tires and maintaining them correctly one of the best tricks to get the most bang for your moto-buck.

Cruiser and touring tires are designed to deliver high mileage and stability, while being tough enough to handle heavy loads. Some, like the Dunlop Elite 4, come in both bias-ply and radial construction options. The Elite 4’s new tread pattern and multi-compound design offer extended mileage and even wear. Power cruiser and custom bike owners may choose a more aggressive performance tire, such as the Avon Cobra. The Cobra incorporates sport tire technology for great handling and stability.
Cruiser and touring tires are designed to deliver high mileage and stability, while being tough enough to handle heavy loads. Some, like the Dunlop Elite 4 (right), come in both bias-ply and radial construction options. The Elite 4’s new tread pattern and multi-compound design offer extended mileage and even wear. Power cruiser and custom bike owners may choose a more aggressive performance tire, such as the Avon Cobra (left). The Cobra incorporates sport tire technology for great handling and stability.

The tires you buy will probably be determined largely by the type of bike you ride and the size of the tires it originally came with. There’s little reason to put a fatter tire on a rim made for a narrower one; it might mess up the handling, throw off the speedometer or rub the swingarm or chain. Still, in some cases you might have to fit a marginally wider tire to get the brand you want on your bike; check with the tire manufacturer to see if the tire will fit, and if they don’t know, ask your good friend the Internet. Odds are that whatever anyone can do with a motorcycle, sane or foolish, someone on the web has tried it.

Sport-touring tires aim to deliver great mileage and handling performance for today’s high-tech sport-touring machines. The Metzeler RoadTec 01 has a tread pattern that improves grip on wet or dry surfaces, with a dual compound that offers cornering confidence and long life. The Shinko 016 Verge features an Aramid front tire for high-speed stability and strength, and a supersport-derived rear for performance. The Bridgestone Battlax T30 EVO uses new compounds to improve traction and control, especially on wet surfaces.
Sport-touring tires aim to deliver great mileage and handling performance for today’s high-tech sport-touring machines. The Metzeler RoadTec 01 (right) has a tread pattern that improves grip on wet or dry surfaces, with a dual compound that offers cornering confidence and long life. The Bridgestone Battlax T30 EVO (left) uses new compounds to improve traction and control, especially on wet surfaces.

You’ll find more latitude in tire compounds, but only within limits. In general you can look at traction and mileage as sitting at opposite ends of a seesaw; as one goes up the other goes down. Sportbike tires stick well in the corners, but wear quickly when ridden on the highway. Cruiser and touring tires last a long time but you wouldn’t want to take either to a track day. Dual-compound tires, with sticky shoulders and harder centers, strike a compromise, but aren’t available for every bike.

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The kind of riding you do has more bearing on the compound you choose than the bike you’re riding. If your current tires have chicken strips as wide as an actual chicken, you’ll probably be fine with tires that favor high mileage over extreme cornering. But if the ends of your footpegs are ground down to points, don’t cheap out on a no-name tire that’ll let you down in the turns.

Sport tires do one thing very well: grip the pavement during aggressive riding, especially when cornering. Sport tires usually feature fewer tread grooves, putting as much rubber on the ground as possible. The Pirelli Diablo Rosso III has a dual compound rear that allows for longer wear down the center, with a silica side compound offering tons of grip when leaning into a corner.
Sport tires do one thing very well: grip the pavement during aggressive riding, especially when cornering. Sport tires usually feature fewer tread grooves, putting as much rubber on the ground as possible. The Pirelli Diablo Rosso III has a dual compound rear that allows for longer wear down the center, with a silica side compound offering tons of grip when leaning into a corner.

The right tires make a big difference in rain. Sportbike tires have fewer and shallower tread grooves for more rubber on the road and better traction, but they’re not as good at channeling water away from the contact patch as a tire with a lot of deep grooves. Start off on a multi-day trip on super-sporty rubber and you might find yourself skating down the highway sideways in a downpour.

Whatever tires you choose, the best way to help them last as long as they can is to check the pressures often. All tires (and inner tubes) lose air over time, some faster than others. Fit new valve stems every time you buy tires, and use metal caps, not plastic ones. Get a good tire-pressure gauge and keep it handy, either in the garage or stored on the bike. Daily pressure checks might not be necessary; weekly is about right.

There are two main types of ADV tires: street-oriented for occasional dirt or gravel roads and high mileage, and “50/50,” typically knobbier for more aggressive riding off-road at the expense of mileage. The Vee Rubber VRM-193 is a bias-ply 80-percent pavement/20-percent dirt and gravel tire offered in many popular sizes. The Michelin Anakee Wild is an example of a “50/50” radial tire, designed to deliver off-road performance with extended on-road mileage.
There are two main types of ADV tires: street-oriented for occasional dirt or gravel roads and high mileage, and “50/50,” typically knobbier for more aggressive riding off-road at the expense of mileage. The Vee Rubber VRM-193 (left) is a bias-ply 80-percent pavement/20-percent dirt and gravel tire offered in many popular sizes. The Michelin Anakee Wild (right) is an example of a “50/50” radial tire, designed to deliver off-road performance with extended on-road mileage.

While you’re checking pressure, get the wheel off the ground and rotate the tire, checking for anything that doesn’t belong there, like nails, pebbles wedged in the grooves––pretty much anything that isn’t made of rubber is suspect––and cracks or tears in the sidewall or tread.

Many tire companies advise against using rubber treatments on the outside of tires or liquid sealers or balancers inside. This leads some riders to imagine tire manufacturers as greedy, Scrooge McDuck-type characters sitting on piles of money and thinking up new ways to make customers buy tires more often. But the real reason tire manufacturers don’t like these products is because they either don’t know what’s in them or what they’ll do to the tires over the long haul, or they do know what’s in them and know they’ll affect the tire’s performance.

7 COMMENTS

  1. I imagine many readers would appreciate a full on debate about the contents of that last paragraph! While there may never be definitive answers to the questions, there’s enough expertise out there to move the debates forward. From where I sit, after 40 years of riding, compared to the tyres of yore, all the contemporary motorcycle tires (especially the ADV’s) are pretty much magic. That said, how to balance and maintain tires seems to remain a bit of a mystery – at least to me.

    • As to the liquid sealers inside, I think it’s maybe a bit of both, greed AND not knowing what it might do, but as to treatments on the outside, I certainly don’t want a slick, often silicone based compound on the tires that will inevitably run off the sides and onto the tread when it rains.

      • Agreed. My most recent experiment is to use “larger” BB sized balance-beads in my ADV tires. The rationale is that, should they catch a bit of mud, the beads will be a tad more useful than rim weights. I still use computer balancing on the street bikes, but I’m starting to question that as well. I also used the slime in another tire but haven’t removed it yet to see what it looks like after a lot of use. In other words, I don’t have a clue . . .

    • Tire and tyre both mean a covering for a wheel made of rubber. While tire is the preferred spelling in the U.S. some Canadians (who also spell color, colour – odd balls that we are) tyre is sometimes preferred, and tyre is the norm in most varieties of English outside North America. I’ve also seen it used on a fairly regular basis by that fellow Clement Salvadori, but what what would he know? Bottom line, great big beautiful walls or no great big beautiful walls, English is used a fair bit outside of the USA not exactly as it is used inside the USA.

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