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New Member
      
Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 7/29/2008 6:11:58 PM
Posts: 79,
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For years I've made it a habit to check tire pressures before I ride. In addition to any other benefit, the handling and tire wear will be predictable.
A side benefit is that any deviation from normal may indicate a problem. Tire pressures go up and down with changes in temperature and barometric pressure (usually 1/2 psi or less), but when all is well the deviations in pressures will be the same in the front and back tires (and in air suspension adjustment, if you happen to have that).
This morning I checked as usual, and found that the rear tire was down 1-1/2 psi. It should have been down 1/2, because that's how much the front tire pressure had decreased.
Although I had cleaned things up after Friday's ride and noticed nothing out of the ordinary, I gave the tire a good inspection. While some might just re-inflate it, I have learned from experience that a decrease like that, even in two days, is very unusual. I found a fairly well-hidden part of a nail, and a couple of inches away a quarter-inch gash in the tread. If I had just started it up and gone, I probably would have been stranded on the road somewhere pretty quick. On a typical morning, that might be the HOV lane on the freeway, which is not a good place to be stopped.
So this is a little reminder that a pre-ride inspection is a good idea, including an air pressure check. It can tell you a lot about the condition of your tires even without a visual inspection. Besides, bikes handle better with full pressure instead of half pressure in the tires.
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Average Member
      
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Last Login: Today @ 1:09:10 PM
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Well said, rw! Tire condition is absolutely the most important safety check you can make on a motorcycle. It always amazes me when I see someone riding on almost bald tires or grossly uneven tread wear.
Now, let me get this right - is it one down, four up?
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Average Member
      
Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 11/25/2008 9:23:22 AM
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+1 on what RW said .....
Recently I replaced my front tire. It happened because one day, I took the bike to a friend's shop and asked him to look at the tire. After about 15 mins of him telling me what a jerk I was for riding on it in that condition, I then woke up to the fact that it had been a while since I did anything other than check the air pressure. Tunnel vision had set in and I never really looked at the tread wear.
I replaced it with a new Metzler and what a difference in handling. I had not realized how much compensating I was doing. Apparently the bike was drifting and other such problems all related to a tire that was well past its point of replacement. I would ride and adjust my riding style to make the bike work correctly.
I am very lucky and your thread reemphasizes the need to not just check the tire pressure, but the general condition as well. Thanks...
The "Z" MAN - North Carolina
1995 BMW R1100R - MOA #115950
Olympia, Scorpion, Gerbings, & Alpinestars
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