|
Post by rickbrown01 on Jun 23, 2013 12:52:24 GMT 1
I have a spare set of standard wheels for my RD350lc and I was thinking of putting bigger tyres on them. I have 90/90 and 110/80 BT45's on the bike at the moment. What bigger sizes has anyone fitted on the standard rims. I was thinking 100/90 or 110/80 avon roadriders on the front and 130/80 on the back. Cheers. Rick.
|
|
|
Post by rickbrown01 on Jun 23, 2013 12:53:34 GMT 1
PS has anyone run them without inner tubes on the standard rims?
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 23, 2013 13:25:22 GMT 1
hi , i run those sizes on my 250 that runs 350 rims , been told roadriders will run tubeless on lc rims ok
|
|
|
Post by oldelsieboy on Jun 23, 2013 13:46:02 GMT 1
PS has anyone run them without inner tubes on the standard rims? Its your life, but the service manual states "fit tube tyres only" for a reason. OEB
|
|
|
Post by rickbrown01 on Jun 23, 2013 14:03:11 GMT 1
Hi Ozzie, when you say you run those sizes on your 250 what sizes exactly?
|
|
|
Post by ianr4863 on Jun 23, 2013 17:05:53 GMT 1
I have just taken a 100/90 BT45 off mine and put on a 90/90 BT45 . I like it much better now . HTH
|
|
|
Post by crash on Jun 23, 2013 17:08:49 GMT 1
with no tubes in it will let air out
|
|
|
Post by Delbert on Jun 23, 2013 19:33:55 GMT 1
with no tubes in it will let air out +1 & I wouldn't mess with tyre sizes , been there ,done it and have always ended up putting stock sizes back
|
|
|
Post by Roofmonster on Jun 23, 2013 19:45:46 GMT 1
with no tubes in it will let air out +1 & I wouldn't mess with tyre sizes , been there ,done it and have always ended up putting stock sizes back +2 better with stock sizes IMO
|
|
|
Post by gazlad on Jun 23, 2013 20:06:06 GMT 1
Been tubeless for a couple of years, run a bigger rear tyre, never lost pressure, and no probs with rear end
|
|
|
Post by steeley on Jun 23, 2013 20:38:15 GMT 1
wheels not designed to run tyres with out the tube in.had a tyre man tell me all about it years ago so fitted tubes after going tubeless.he said some thing about the chance of instant deflation ,ooh mrs.
|
|
|
Post by rickbrown01 on Jun 23, 2013 22:25:54 GMT 1
I think I will stick with running tubes, thanks for the input. Still fancy slightly bigger tyres than standard. Still fancy going a bit bigger than standard on the tyres, 110 on the back looks too skinny.
|
|
|
Post by midlifecrisisrd on Jun 24, 2013 8:15:12 GMT 1
Don't think the problem is losing air but tubeless wheels have a different lip on them on the inside to stop the tyre coming off the rimm under load or if deflated.
Certainly would not risk it.
What benefit is there?
Steve
|
|
|
Post by ianr4863 on Jun 24, 2013 21:00:53 GMT 1
Back in the day I worked in a Yamaha main dealer . Mitsui staff told us as a fact that LC alloys can be porous so cannot be used without tubes .
As for tyre sizes , I can only say again that mine handles so much better on standard sizes .
All that over sized tyre has to go somewhere - when it cant go sideways it goes upwards .
|
|
|
Post by petejw22 on Jun 24, 2013 22:46:03 GMT 1
.... LC & YPVS standard size tyres do look skinny, but it doesn't matter, as long as you have good ones fitted they will work well.
They are 25 / 30 year old machines after all..
|
|
|
Post by rickbrown01 on Jun 25, 2013 8:22:24 GMT 1
Sounds like it is definitely tubes then, and I will stick with standard sizes for now. Cheers.
|
|
|
Post by hooligan on Jun 26, 2013 22:42:19 GMT 1
My 4LO has slightly larger tires and the bike doesn't sit on the centre stand properly. Anything other than perfectly level ground risks a tip over. As well the larger front rubs on the fender stay which is REALLY annoying. I ended up taking an angle grinder to the edges of the tire to get it to fit properly.
|
|
|
Post by 67kev on Oct 5, 2013 9:13:13 GMT 1
The wheels really set that bike off :-)
|
|
|
Post by ulsta on Oct 5, 2013 12:20:40 GMT 1
I remember this being discussed years ago. might have been on another forum. Im only going on memory, which isn't the best these days. There are a couple of different types of rim, WM and MT. WM is the tubed type and MT is Motorcycle Tubeless. LC's have MT rims, so you'd think that tubeless would be ok but the rims can be porous so you need tubes. As for sizes on an LC the standard sizes are best. Its usually possible to go up or down a size, and there are charts on the interweb that will say which size rim can take which size tyre. but i think for the 1.85 rim we have on the LC the tyres already at it maximum size. The upshot is for standard wheels stick with the recommended size and type. LC's are old bikes, they wernt designed for modern tyres. However if you fit modern wheels then thats another thing altogether.
|
|
|
Post by bare on Oct 5, 2013 18:32:00 GMT 1
The wheels really set that bike off :-) IMO in a bad way .. but everybody has their own view of the world. Besides making one 'Mo' attractive to wimmen' Oversize tires dramatically deteriorate the handling.
|
|
|
Post by steven on Oct 5, 2013 18:42:51 GMT 1
PS has anyone run them without inner tubes on the standard rims? Im sure Niall Mackenzie said he was running tubless tyres and no tubes on his recent restoration of his LC in CMM, I think ?
|
|
|
Post by majortom on Oct 5, 2013 20:23:04 GMT 1
They corner better with std tyres on,
|
|
|
Post by blyth1970 on Oct 5, 2013 20:57:46 GMT 1
Hi, stay with tubes for sure. and run standard size tyres, just go for top quality rubber. it will handle better.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 5, 2013 23:24:19 GMT 1
PS has anyone run them without inner tubes on the standard rims? Im sure Niall Mackenzie said he was running tubless tyres and no tubes on his recent restoration of his LC in CMM, I think ? He did... and he put a 120/90 on the back.
|
|
|
Post by gazlad on Oct 5, 2013 23:38:37 GMT 1
The wheels really set that bike off :-) IMO in a bad way .. but everybody has their own view of the world. Besides making one 'Mo' attractive to wimmen' Oversize tires dramatically deteriorate the handling. Who asked for your opinion anyway !! IMO indeed!
|
|
|
Post by yamanastic on Oct 6, 2013 14:35:58 GMT 1
Been tubeless for a couple of years, run a bigger rear tyre, never lost pressure, and no probs with rear end What size rear tyre are you running on yours?
|
|
|
Post by 67kev on Oct 6, 2013 21:48:46 GMT 1
Hi Bare, not sure if you understood my comment properly, but I was referring to the colour of the wheels not the tyre sizes ;-)
|
|
|
Post by copper99 on Oct 7, 2013 19:45:44 GMT 1
Just read in PB mag, John McGuiness rode the Paton 500 to a 110 or 115 mile an hour lap at this years classic TT...with a 110 on the rear, I think thats enough reason for me to stay at standard sizes.
|
|
|
Post by steve h on Oct 7, 2013 20:40:59 GMT 1
Back in the day, the Michelin TG22s we used were not std sized. But on the front I think the TF was near to std size ( they weren't measured the same , ie 120/90) And I cant remember the sizing numbers, but they did not "ruin" the handling. I never got on with a Dunlop on the front, so have no idea on the sizing of them. I'm having a turf out in my old w/kshop, there may be an odd old tyre around.
|
|
|
Post by gazlad on Oct 7, 2013 22:07:37 GMT 1
Been tubeless for a couple of years, run a bigger rear tyre, never lost pressure, and no probs with rear end What size rear tyre are you running on yours? BT45's 90 front 120 rear, no problems & handles really well.
|
|