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AT least he was only beating a dead horse and not eating a dead horse...that might have made the meal less appetizing! :)
Back to a post by Arizona Wayne, could you explain how horizontal or side forces are created by your tire ? If you viewed your bike from behind when cornering, the resultant of forces on the wheel are directly perpendicular to the axle. If you hung a pendulum in front of you in a corner you'd see the effect, if the string was in front of your nose, the weight on the end would point at the centre line of the tank, the only way in normal riding to apply side loads is on a trike or side car. If this was not so your bike would fall over.
I have been running Shinko 009's on my B1100 for 40K miles w/o any problems.
hly Ok Dusty, I'll leave it there but happy to defend my argument if asked, but I don't want to be labelled a troll. Honestly though Dusty to say he might be on to something as a supporting argument might need a bit more substance. It's not a personal attack on the guy, but he's just not on the money there.
Yeah sounds like there's no losers there, how does it compare price wise to a Michelin for example ?
Wayne is referring to his use of car tires on his MP3 . He is probably onto something , as the flat profile is possibly creating some weird side loading on the bearings . Dusty
Your game Huzo - I thought that was a set up and left it alone. I'll back you now you've mentioned it though.Dusty - I may be seeing things upside under with squintedeyes - aren't those MP3's those twin front wheel thingiesupon which the front's lean with the "bike"? Cheers Maurie.
Think of it this way . A flat profile tire is resistant to rolling over , so instead of a linear transition from upright to leaned over , there is a momentary side loading of the bearing as the tire resists what the MC is asking for . Picture a wheel barrow with a round profile tire , and then picture the same device with a flat profile tire , The round tire will transition smoothly as the wheelbarrow banks, a flat profile tire will want to hold the wheel upright as the forks or swing arm move to an angle . Dusty
Wow you must of used up allot of brain cells on that bit of logic! You almost have me believing.:-)BTW Have you heard that the earth is flat?Fits right in.
I haven't learned how to do that thing where you put a quote above your post
Yeah ok Dusty, thank you for your help and for putting me straight, it's good medicine for me but tastes lousy ! Understood now, but does the rear wheel lean or remain "square" to the road as the earlier post asked?