- Joined
- May 19, 2009
- Messages
- 79
- Points
- 3,101
- City
- Vancover, BC
- Vehicle Year
- 1990
- Transmission
- Manual
While it's not uncommon, the idea of mismatching tires being a problem (on a motorcycle) is far from universal. I've run mismatched tires before and there was nothing remotely weird about the bike's handling related to it. Good grief, some OEM's even cross the line into mixing bias and radial tires (BMW for one).
As is the joy of mechanics there is no such thing as universal, and nothing is a set rule without ways to bend it. We just don't do it as a practice as say running two tires that have a different compound can give you and issue cornering seeing as say you run a Metzler M5 up front and a Pilot Road on the rear. You can bail pretty easily when railing on the bike in turns as coming up to the turn you have good grip with the front tire but when transitioning to the rear tire coming onto the throttle it could let go being a harder compound tire that is not able to cope with the current load being applied against it max coefficiant of friction.
Is the average rider going to notice, probably not, but we make it policy to not do anything to the bikes that could compromise safety should someone run the bike to full potential.
and yeah, I know of things like the Michelin Anakee that is a bias front and radial rear but this is again catering to the enduro market when wheel skip or wobble is somewhat of expected due to loose suspension and knobby tires for off-road. Just like how someone driving with 6"lift and huge mudders would expect some drift cornering at highway speeds.
Also one thing I have learned working on European bikes is that they are always an exception. I have gotten to used to peoples confused looks when I tell them why that horrible noise or vibration is the bike operating as designed...
So I am not saying it can't be done, and along with exhaust and oil type every shop policy and rule is based on someones personal opinion or experiance. So I do encourage people to think about the idea, apply the logic, and come up with your own conclusion. But others input gives you something to bounce off of, and maybe a point you didn't think of.
Cheers
Dave


