New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
If some of you are ordering tires online, where do you take them to be mounted and balanced ? Do they charge more to mount and balance for tires that weren't purchased there ? As a business owner I can see how this scenario might be awkward.
I've never received any tire more than one year old from American Motorcycle Tire. http://www.americanmototire.com/catalog/
There are three parts to a dealership: Sales. Parts. Service. Sure, some dealerships might turn away easy money for the service department because the parts department didn't make any. Anyway, I have either the local Honda store, or the local BMW dealer mount mine. Been doing it that way for years.Just call up your local shop and ask for the carry in rate. Don't ask them to pull the wheels off the bike. Most dealers will balk at that, not having ever seen a Guzzi before.
If some of you are ordering tires online, where do you take them to be mounted and balanced ?
And that contraption next to your wheel on the ground is? (assuming a bead breaker but is it home made?)
Many dealers have the 'B team' people doing tires. They seldom know what they are doing, or care, and often screw it up. I got tired of that and started doing my own.
I too learned to do my own. I have a Cycle Hill tire changer that works well. I started with a HF mini changer but it wasn't really up to the job when mounting some stiff sidewall tires for my scooter. The MP3 scooter I had was the reason I learned to do my own. The model I had comes with a 12" diameter rear wheel and the scooter is pretty heavy so I was getting 2500 miles per tire (this isn't all that unusual per other owners of 12" rear MP3's) and that would only last me 4 months at the most. The final nail was taking my scoot into the dealer for a tire change and getting charged over $250 for the rear wheel change including the cost of the tire. When I went to pick up the bike I found the "C" team guy trying to put my bike back together by looking at another MP3 from the showroom. I had to point out a missing piece laying on the floor and the ride home afterward was nerve wracking and stupid of me to even do since I had zero confidence the job was done correctly. As soon as I got home I took the whole rear wheel off and re-did the assembly at which point I discovered I had been given a low cost Chinese tire instead of the premium German one I had paid for. Got my money back from that and never looked back after researching how to do it myself.
I, too, have a HF, but it *loves* to eat your wheels. I modded it so nothing but Delrin touches the rim. Saw a picture of the Mojo Lever, and modified the HF to work like that. I highly recommend the Mojo lever..
I didn't know you were a guzzi owner. good to see you over here. I still have my mp3 500 but added a 2013 norge to my barn last year. OAD
you get what you pay for
I think that's why you sometimes get a shop's tire monkey. The real mechanics don't want to fool with it.
Yep, and that makes sense. A good mechanic at a busy shop can serve everyone better by using his skills inside a motor, or whatever. But I work of beer, so my rates are much better. BTW: I have the MoJo lever too. For the blocks, I just cleaned the metal ones up with a grinder and glued a layer of PET plastic to them.
Out in SoCal, I asked Mark Ethridge if he would put tires on the Mighty Scura. He said, "No.. make that Hell no. You can buy tires off the internet cheaper than I can get them." I said, OK, how much would you charge to put tires on that I bring in?" He said, " I'd give you 20 dollars to take them to this guy and have him do it. I *hate* dealing with tires."