SpencerPJ Posted March 15, 2021 #1 Posted March 15, 2021 So, I have an 83. Below are pictures of my current tires. They are Shinko 230 Tour Master, purchased and installed July 2018, and I have 11,706 miles on them. I know they are nearing their end, but how far do you guys typically ride with them. FYI, I generally keep within 75 miles of my house, mostly country afternoon rides, do not ride very sporty, on occasion will crank on throttle .
Marcarl Posted March 16, 2021 #2 Posted March 16, 2021 Install date is not near as important as manufacturing date. As far as tread wear, I would say ride it yet for a while. Keep in mind that 75% of tire life is in the first 25% of tread wear.
SpencerPJ Posted March 16, 2021 Author #3 Posted March 16, 2021 Surprisingly, they were both early 2018 tires. I forget the week, too lazy to get on my knees and look, but I do recall being a stickler (I own a TT, know all about that discussion). I'm just wondering if those dots are the 'replace now threshold' ?
Marcarl Posted March 16, 2021 #4 Posted March 16, 2021 There are wear bars (Spots) in the center tread. One can be seen near the top of the picture. Get down to where there is no difference and it's time to replace. You're getting close.
saddlebum Posted March 16, 2021 #5 Posted March 16, 2021 (edited) As well as the wear bars you can measure the tread depth. For motorcycle tires minimum tread depth is 1.5mm or 2/32nds, at three equally spaced areas around the tire. This is to eliminate a single flat spot caused by braking for example from condemning a tire when the tread depth around the rest of the tire is acceptable, ( unless of course that flat spot is down to a dangerous level such as near or at the cords ). Anything less and you need to replace those tires. Other factors you need to look for are hairline cracks in the side wall or in the tread grooves. Abnormal sidewall bulges or signs of tread separation. Lastly a tire may appear perfectly normal with lots of tread but got hard with age, so when you feel a tire loosing road grip when they should still be biting replace them. The last thing you need is a tire breaking loose, from the road in a curve or corner. The manufactures date stamp, is a good guide line but I have had tires go hard and become dangerous within three years of the manufacturing date stamp and have to admit it hurts to replace tires with plenty of tread left but I am sure road rash or worse would hurt a whole lot more. With regards to those dots I am pretty sure they are also wear indicators. easy way to find out is measure the depth of the dot with a tread gauge and compare to the tread depth adjacent to the dot if the difference is approx 1.5 mm or 2/32nds than you know. Edited March 16, 2021 by saddlebum
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