Brilliant Video Jon!! Watchin this made me feel tyred😁I just looked on Google, tyres are the UK spelling but you guys in the US spell it tires I did not know that, you learn something New everyday!!
Woow!!! Thx a lot for sharing. I have Rad Power mini 4, I got 3 liners in each tire, to prevent punch and I still got some ones in a while. And let's not talk about how frequently we need to change tires because the asfalt eat them to fast. This video will help me a lot. I do 20 miles daily back and further to work. 😅 thx a lot.
I got mine at J&P cycles for $42/piece. I just used some soapy water on the rim and they went right on along with giving that stiff rubber a chance to slide while filling them up to seat properly. No tire (tyre) irons used!
@@MrCentralDriver I wish!! Maybe in the future. I’m running stock 750w motor with a BBSHD mid drive, asi controller at around 3000w. I would like to just remove the hub and just use a 7 speed rear wheel with the BBSHD but they are very hard to find. Bike is a bit to heavy with 3 batteries,2 motors and Shinkos on a Juiced City Scrambler bike. Like your videos. Always good to see different builds.
@@kmtnbike1117 Try the Lectric XP Premium to start off with as it does have a built-in Mid Drive motor and dual battery powered combination with 20ah worth of batteries; I am certain the wheels would also take the Shinko 567 series tires sized for 110-90/16 also as well and it also has the full five power preset tiered power levels for the pedal assistance system also as well; also this whole thing would be also highly affordable as the Lectric XP Premium can be had for $1900 currently right now and one could simply just substitute one of the two available batteries(auxiliary battery in the back) with a much larger optional primary auxiliary conservatively sized blue shrink wrapped 48V 40ah lithium ion battery and then simply also use the secondary 48V 10.4ah factory stock auxiliary battery as backup secondary independent emergency power source just to individually power one's fully truly updated and upgraded powerful motorcycle led lighting system also as well; it all should be doable for about $3,000 or so.
That was a beautiful afternoon👀 on your little beautiful red devil👀 you should’ve sprayed WD-40 on the tires they were a popped in the rim easier👀 i’m just saying👀 because you got good tires👀 don’t get sloppy on the road👀 PS how many times did you pinch your fingers👀👀😜 Good show👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
sometimes it helps to let them sit in the sun and be warm when installing and to ride it a mile on low psi to get it loose then take it off and fill it up all the way a little bit above stated psi on the tire to straighten them out then back off of the psi until its at the right level. its ghetto but if the tire fits in your oven you can sit it there at 115 for 20 minutes then wear gloves to install it haha
Yes I agree simply throw one's Shinko tire into a hot car and let it bake and heat up during the day time for a couple hours; also use the dawn dishwashing fluid diluted with water along with a couple drops of mineral water added as one's ultimate soapy water tire bead super lubricant mixture; also one can use one's local harborfreight store to up one of their auto tire iron which are twenty four inches long; though make sure to use a micro fiber towel to prevent scratching one's wheel rim surface; a little prying force that is magnified over that twenty four inch long nice tire iron is going to make it much easier along with the use of the dishwasher fluid and water with mineral oil mixture tire bead lubricant.
I just found out. They measure motor cycle tires with mini meters, and 16 inches is the size of your rim. 110 mm is actual 4 .75 inches? And 70 is the ratio is how much percentages the side wall of the tire meet the base or tread of the tire. Hope that helps.
the equivalent generic size is 3.00 inch x 16 inch tire to the 4.00 inch x 20 inch fat tire; its a tire classification sizing thing. for example 100mm x 80 series x 16 inch would also likely work since 100mm is about four inches width dimension for example 110mm x 70 series x 16 inch would also likely work since 110mm is about four and a quarter inch width dimension with a slightly lower vertical height profile tire height the tread depth is close to half an inch and the robustness of the motorcycle tire carcass is also heavily reinforced to DOT guideline specifications for motorcycle; so while it is more money it is well worth it in the tire puncture protection department. Now an additional upgrade tire choice option to the Shinko SR567 110/70-16 scooter tire would be the Kenda K671 series tire which also has a matching entry size in the Kenda K671 110/70-16 size scooter tire also as well; reading the scooter tire reviews the rubber tire compound used the Kenda K671 is a much harder street rubber tire compound which should yield even better tire endurance, very long prolonged tire mileage capabilities and in particular significantly enhanced tire puncture resistance capabilities also as well. Now JPCycle has the $112 scooter tire discounted to $89 which is about a 21 percent savings discount and is one of the more reliable and reputable tire sellers on the internet that sells quality branded name tires; though the Kenda K671 scooter tire is about 60 percent more in cost than the Shinko SR567 110/70-16 scooter tires; so one could theoretically in fact put the Kenda K671 110/70-16 scooter tire on the rear wheel while also putting the Shinko SR567 on the front wheel at the same time; now since the front tire typically last two to three times longer than the typical rear scooter tire; so while the Shinko SR567 scooter tire in the front wheel will probably last at least 10,000 miles; the Kenda K671 scooter tire placed in the rear wheel with its significantly much harder rubber tire compound will probably likely be more puncture resistant over its long expected scooter tire lifetime, which will probably also last 10,000 miles also as well while at the same time reducing its potential tire puncture frequency interval; so long as one shifts more of one's braking to the front wheel than the rear wheel braking when it's applicable and potentially possible; all to help prolong the rear tire's long potential optimal expected lifetime. Shinko SR567 110/70-16 is about $56 on front tire Kenda K671 110/70-16 is about $89 on rear tire So the front tire Shinko SR567 110/70-16 and rear tire Kenda K671 100/70-16 combination pair will be about $145 for about 10,000 miles of potential tire tread life without quite as much potential for tire puncture frequency occurrence's hopefully. the cost would be roughly about 1.45 cents per mile for both tire pairs or about 0.725 cents per mile per tire on average; which is still far better than the generic 20 inch by 4 inch tire which typically only lasts 900 miles or so at $30 replacement tire cost which costs roughly about 3.3 cents per mile per tire; which actually means the cost of the generic 20 inch by 4 inch tire costs about 4.55 times more than using the front tire Shinko SR567 110/70-16 mounted on the front wheel and the rear tire Kenda K671 mounted on the rear wheel; so therefore it makes perfect rational economic common thought provoking sense to actually undertake and go ahead and do the actual tire upgrade option select choice; and thus save oneself some very sizeable tire expense savings and also hopefully save oneself some truly unneeded potential tire punctures in both front/rear wheels for both the short and long term time frame tire puncture occurrence intervals also as well.
Aee man, would you still recommend the shinkos tires you have on your super73. Do you still have them on. And anything else you didn't recommend. I just don't want any more flags miles away from my house with no one to help..lol. know what I mean. Thank you so much. And i love your videos
gr8 video, so overall, what are the best tires to replace the stock BDGR ones? on original motor and rims of course....i could not find anything that will match the beads . .. :( i spent some money on different ones, but had to send them back every time, they did not fit . .
Awesome video ✊… so I’m interested in possibly *modding a Super73-RX* and possibly installing a *mid-drive motor* on this with Shigura MT7(Shimano lever’s/Magura rotor’s and pad’s) hybrid brake’s. Is a mid drive system possible on this RX frame you think? Maybe with a 72v/60v depending on available space.
I would love that creative idea in that it would be the first new and one of a kind hybrid mid-drive electric powered Super73 Super Bike; and to actually have that mid-drive motor controlled by a matching motor controller that would allow one to also have active a graphic console user interface screen; to enable one to actually set and power level adjust one's fully adjustable customized pedal assistance levels with up to ten customized preset pedal assistance power levels; now that would be the kind of stuff that e-biking dreams are truly made to fully realize; even if its $2,500 bucks in total cost to upgrade.
Heck after the first year the warranty is up anyhow; these upgrades only make the Super73 better than the original equipment specification easily by far.
I've had about 8 rear flats (this means that 72v setup could never work for me with how often this rear tire comes off). Seems every 4 rides I avg a flat. Get frustrated. Leave bike in garage for a month, change the tire, get a few rides, flat again. Wonder if this is a solution... Grzzly tires were doing well but had 2 flats on those now too. Long sigh. Looks great. Is the rear tire that's part of the SR567 combo not have a fit?
Could have something stuck in the tire you haven’t noticed poping it every so often. Happened to me. Go motorcycle tires and you’ll be fine. You order two front tires and use them for front and back.
Try using the Thornbuster tire liners a dual stack layer along with some butyl rubber tape purchased from amazon to stick each of the Thornbuster tire liner layers directly to the tire carcass itself; so that is four layers substantial puncture isolation layers that work towards the goal of overall puncture protection; also one can use half a bottle of Flat Out purchased from amazon for about $20 so that is $10 per tire to pretreat each tire; now if one still experiences a potential puncture flat simply use half a bottle(16 ounce) per tire and it should help to seal the tire puncture enough to get home till one can repair tire puncture.
Are you using some special inner tubes with these, or just the stock Super73 tubes? Somebody said that it's worth going with thicker motorcycle tubes. Any suggestions for those?
No matter what I do, I can’t seat the bead on them. There is always one spot that gets sucked into the rim a little bit more. How do you combat it? I’ve literally tried everything. Soapy water, special tire lube, heating the tire, giving it 70 PSI (scared to go any higher) and nothing pops into place.
@@MrCentralDriver thanks a lot. One more thing …did you follow the arrows on the tire for rotation or did you interchange them given both are front tires. Hope you can advise me. I installed mine and the ride is so bouncy on the rear.
They both point straight. Nothing if different. It’s going on a bike not a scooter. It’s made for the front of a scooter. You will need to deflate and even the bead around the rim to make it as perfect as u can. It’s hard to do. Easy to lay the bike down
Make sure u don’t have any weight on the tire. Air it up while holding it even little by little. Move it around under low pressure if it’s uneven. It took me a few try’s.
tought about getting motorcycle tires on my ariel rider x but then found vee tire huntsman tires and their great just used motorcycle 3.5 tubes seemed like twice as thick vs stock
Depending on the brand's particular tire characteristics the motorcycle tire with the heavier motorcycle tire and the heavier duty tire carcass is the one with the potential to reduce road punctures over time.
Buy the Shinko SR567 Tires: amzn.to/38oRpne
Nice video bro, would love to race your super73 and see what it can do.👌🏽🔥🔥
Brilliant Video Jon!! Watchin this made me feel tyred😁I just looked on Google, tyres are the UK spelling but you guys in the US spell it tires I did not know that, you learn something New everyday!!
I didn’t no that 🤣
The little shoe on that kickstand got me.
Amazon or eBay :). Keychain shoes
Hell yeah! These tires are amazing! I just got mine in today! I have rode them on the homie Jimmys bike with his 72v kit and it was epic!
🤘🏼🤘🏼🍻🍻💯💯
They are so damn good. My next video I’ll be riding with them and giving my. Thoughts.
What size motorcycle tires would you put on a 26 by 4 inch ebike rim?
Woow!!! Thx a lot for sharing.
I have Rad Power mini 4, I got 3 liners in each tire, to prevent punch and I still got some ones in a while. And let's not talk about how frequently we need to change tires because the asfalt eat them to fast.
This video will help me a lot. I do 20 miles daily back and further to work. 😅 thx a lot.
The tires look awesome. Making it more difficult for me to put off changing mine.
Dude wait till next video. I am in love!!
I got mine at J&P cycles for $42/piece. I just used some soapy water on the rim and they went right on along with giving that stiff rubber a chance to slide while filling them up to seat properly. No tire (tyre) irons used!
Did u have the 5000 w rear wheel ? My stock rim, the tire went on fine!
@@MrCentralDriver
I wish!! Maybe in the future. I’m running stock 750w motor with a BBSHD mid drive, asi controller at around 3000w. I would like to just remove the hub and just use a 7 speed rear wheel with the BBSHD but they are very hard to find. Bike is a bit to heavy with 3 batteries,2 motors and Shinkos on a Juiced City Scrambler bike. Like your videos. Always good to see different builds.
@@kmtnbike1117 Try the Lectric XP Premium to start off with as it does have a built-in Mid Drive motor and dual battery powered combination with 20ah worth of batteries; I am certain the wheels would also take the Shinko 567 series tires sized for 110-90/16 also as well and it also has the full five power preset tiered power levels for the pedal assistance system also as well; also this whole thing would be also highly affordable as the Lectric XP Premium can be had for $1900 currently right now and one could simply just substitute one of the two available batteries(auxiliary battery in the back) with a much larger optional primary auxiliary conservatively sized blue shrink wrapped 48V 40ah lithium ion battery and then simply also use the secondary 48V 10.4ah factory stock auxiliary battery as backup secondary independent emergency power source just to individually power one's fully truly updated and upgraded powerful motorcycle led lighting system also as well; it all should be doable for about $3,000 or so.
What size motorcycle tires would you put on a 26 by 4 inch ebike rim?
What size motorcycle tires would you put on a 26 by 4 inch ebike rim?
Looks way better
Really does.
That was a beautiful afternoon👀 on your little beautiful red devil👀 you should’ve sprayed WD-40 on the tires they were a popped in the rim easier👀 i’m just saying👀 because you got good tires👀 don’t get sloppy on the road👀 PS how many times did you pinch your fingers👀👀😜 Good show👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
sometimes it helps to let them sit in the sun and be warm when installing and to ride it a mile on low psi to get it loose then take it off and fill it up all the way a little bit above stated psi on the tire to straighten them out then back off of the psi until its at the right level. its ghetto but if the tire fits in your oven you can sit it there at 115 for 20 minutes then wear gloves to install it haha
Yeah I should have used soap and water and let them sit for a bit so make them easier to stretch 🥲
Yes I agree simply throw one's Shinko tire into a hot car and let it bake and heat up during the day time for a couple hours; also use the dawn dishwashing fluid diluted with water along with a couple drops of mineral water added as one's ultimate soapy water tire bead super lubricant mixture; also one can use one's local harborfreight store to up one of their auto tire iron which are twenty four inches long; though make sure to use a micro fiber towel to prevent scratching one's wheel rim surface; a little prying force that is magnified over that twenty four inch long nice tire iron is going to make it much easier along with the use of the dishwasher fluid and water with mineral oil mixture tire bead lubricant.
I’m gonna have to save myself a piece of that heavy duty foam. That is obviously the trick for installing tires..
Use soapy water in a spray bottle spray around the tire bead both sides of the rims. 👍
Great tip!
I love Dr Pepper cream too 😭😭
I’m tired of these inner tubes leaving me stranded..I have to do this!!
haven't had a flat since i uploaded this and i've even had glass in them
Is this a good replacement for 20x40 tires?
I just found out. They measure motor cycle tires with mini meters, and 16 inches is the size of your rim. 110 mm is actual 4 .75 inches? And 70 is the ratio is how much percentages the side wall of the tire meet the base or tread of the tire. Hope that helps.
Great job thx Mr Cd.
Thanks sir
Thanks for another awesome video 😎😎😎😎
Waiting for the blooper reel on this 1 🤭☝️🤟👽
Dope tires anyway do they have 17inch tire
They have tons of sizes if you look them up but only this size fits 20x4 ebike wheels
the equivalent generic size is 3.00 inch x 16 inch tire to the 4.00 inch x 20 inch fat tire; its a tire classification sizing thing.
for example 100mm x 80 series x 16 inch would also likely work since 100mm is about four inches width dimension
for example 110mm x 70 series x 16 inch would also likely work since 110mm is about four and a quarter inch width dimension with a slightly lower vertical height profile tire height
the tread depth is close to half an inch and the robustness of the motorcycle tire carcass is also heavily reinforced to DOT guideline specifications for motorcycle; so while it is more money it is well worth it in the tire puncture protection department.
Now an additional upgrade tire choice option to the Shinko SR567 110/70-16 scooter tire would be the Kenda K671 series tire which also has a matching entry size in the Kenda K671 110/70-16 size scooter tire also as well; reading the scooter tire reviews the rubber tire compound used the Kenda K671 is a much harder street rubber tire compound which should yield even better tire endurance, very long prolonged tire mileage capabilities and in particular significantly enhanced tire puncture resistance capabilities also as well.
Now JPCycle has the $112 scooter tire discounted to $89 which is about a 21 percent savings discount and is one of the more reliable and reputable tire sellers on the internet that sells quality branded name tires;
though the Kenda K671 scooter tire is about 60 percent more in cost than the Shinko SR567 110/70-16 scooter tires; so one could theoretically in fact put the Kenda K671 110/70-16 scooter tire on the rear wheel while also putting the Shinko SR567 on the front wheel at the same time;
now since the front tire typically last two to three times longer than the typical rear scooter tire; so while the Shinko SR567 scooter tire in the front wheel will probably last at least 10,000 miles; the Kenda K671 scooter tire placed in the rear wheel with its significantly much harder rubber tire compound will probably likely be more puncture resistant over its long expected scooter tire lifetime, which will probably also last 10,000 miles also as well while at the same time reducing its potential tire puncture frequency interval; so long as one shifts more of one's braking to the front wheel than the rear wheel braking when it's applicable and potentially possible; all to help prolong the rear tire's long potential optimal expected lifetime.
Shinko SR567 110/70-16 is about $56 on front tire
Kenda K671 110/70-16 is about $89 on rear tire
So the front tire Shinko SR567 110/70-16 and rear tire Kenda K671 100/70-16 combination pair will be about $145 for about 10,000 miles of potential tire tread life without quite as much potential for tire puncture frequency occurrence's hopefully. the cost would be roughly about 1.45 cents per mile for both tire pairs or about 0.725 cents per mile per tire on average; which is still far better than the generic 20 inch by 4 inch tire which typically only lasts 900 miles or so at $30 replacement tire cost which costs roughly about 3.3 cents per mile per tire;
which actually means the cost of the generic 20 inch by 4 inch tire costs about 4.55 times more than using the front tire Shinko SR567 110/70-16 mounted on the front wheel and the rear tire Kenda K671 mounted on the rear wheel;
so therefore it makes perfect rational economic common thought provoking sense to actually undertake and go ahead and do the actual tire upgrade option select choice; and thus save oneself some very sizeable tire expense savings and also hopefully save oneself some truly unneeded potential tire punctures in both front/rear wheels for both the short and long term time frame tire puncture occurrence intervals also as well.
Aee man, would you still recommend the shinkos tires you have on your super73. Do you still have them on. And anything else you didn't recommend. I just don't want any more flags miles away from my house with no one to help..lol. know what I mean. Thank you so much. And i love your videos
well done even though you had problems with the back wheel,i would have put the tyre liner in the back tyre just to be safe mate.? from uk
The tire is so thick. It would have made this much more difficult
There was barely any room to even put the inner tube. Liners would be impossible to put in these tires.
I want these tires for my 24x3 wheels
gr8 video, so overall, what are the best tires to replace the stock BDGR ones? on original motor and rims of course....i could not find anything that will match the beads . .. :( i spent some money on different ones, but had to send them back every time, they did not fit . .
Gotta ride powered bike with but 22 and a half inch rims do they make tires for that
Awesome video ✊… so I’m interested in possibly *modding a Super73-RX* and possibly installing a *mid-drive motor* on this with Shigura MT7(Shimano lever’s/Magura rotor’s and pad’s) hybrid brake’s. Is a mid drive system possible on this RX frame you think? Maybe with a 72v/60v depending on available space.
I would love that creative idea in that it would be the first new and one of a kind hybrid mid-drive electric powered Super73 Super Bike; and to actually have that mid-drive motor controlled by a matching motor controller that would allow one to also have active a graphic console user interface screen; to enable one to actually set and power level adjust one's fully adjustable customized pedal assistance levels with up to ten customized preset pedal assistance power levels; now that would be the kind of stuff that e-biking dreams are truly made to fully realize; even if its $2,500 bucks in total cost to upgrade.
Since they weigh twice as much I wonder if installing those tires void the warranty. Thought I saw that from super73 at one time.
Honestly anything that’s not super73 parts will void the warranty. I just wouldn’t tell them about it if you have a problem
Heck after the first year the warranty is up anyhow; these upgrades only make the Super73 better than the original equipment specification easily by far.
@@profdleeucc exactly
will these tires fit on the stock rims ?I notcied that you not a stock back rim
these are made to fit the stock front and back super73 wheels. my 72v rear wheel is way harder to fit these tires on so i struggled.
Think 120s will fit??
I've had about 8 rear flats (this means that 72v setup could never work for me with how often this rear tire comes off). Seems every 4 rides I avg a flat. Get frustrated. Leave bike in garage for a month, change the tire, get a few rides, flat again. Wonder if this is a solution... Grzzly tires were doing well but had 2 flats on those now too. Long sigh. Looks great. Is the rear tire that's part of the SR567 combo not have a fit?
Could have something stuck in the tire you haven’t noticed poping it every so often. Happened to me. Go motorcycle tires and you’ll be fine. You order two front tires and use them for front and back.
Try using the Thornbuster tire liners a dual stack layer along with some butyl rubber tape purchased from amazon to stick each of the Thornbuster tire liner layers directly to the tire carcass itself; so that is four layers substantial puncture isolation layers that work towards the goal of overall puncture protection; also one can use half a bottle of Flat Out purchased from amazon for about $20 so that is $10 per tire to pretreat each tire; now if one still experiences a potential puncture flat simply use half a bottle(16 ounce) per tire and it should help to seal the tire puncture enough to get home till one can repair tire puncture.
With all the ebike riding and fixing. Why not go tubeless with these tires . Any thoughts...anyone
So did you ever fix the lumps? Every moto tire swap I see ends up having lumps. That's the only reason why I haven't done it.
mines not perfect but it doesn't feel bad
Do you think these tires and tannus armor would be too difficult to get on the rim?
U don't need those with these tires.
What inner tube are you using?
Stock
Thank you for video :) . I want know about tires of 20x4.0 it should be 100-90-16 for the compatibility ?
.
Yo for this 72v setup with battery and kit, does it run together with the stock battery ? And does pedal assist still work?
Also do the shinkos make the bike shorter or taller?
stock battery runs off the stock controller under the seat for your lights if you decide to keep it anyways. pedal assist does not work anymore
no it sits the same but they look lower profile
@@MrCentralDriver very nice thanks for all the info.
How wide is your rim?
How would these handle on a dirt road? Are they slick?
They have sticky rubber compared to stock. In dirt I’m not sure. The stock tires were horrible tho
@@MrCentralDriver Agreed. Ive had my bike for a month. Im trying to get the most of of them before buying new ones and your video helped out. Thanks
Are you using some special inner tubes with these, or just the stock Super73 tubes? Somebody said that it's worth going with thicker motorcycle tubes. Any suggestions for those?
Stock tubes. No issues :)
No matter what I do, I can’t seat the bead on them. There is always one spot that gets sucked into the rim a little bit more. How do you combat it? I’ve literally tried everything. Soapy water, special tire lube, heating the tire, giving it 70 PSI (scared to go any higher) and nothing pops into place.
@MrCentralDriver I wanna do this to a fat tire engwe x26 what size should it be exactly?
If it’s 20x4 this same tire fits all those wheels. You just need to see clearance on the bike itself
Did you get two front tires? I can only find the set in different sizes.
Yes they are front tires only. Use for front and back.
@@MrCentralDriver thanks a lot. One more thing …did you follow the arrows on the tire for rotation or did you interchange them given both are front tires. Hope you can advise me. I installed mine and the ride is so bouncy on the rear.
Did the tubes fit for the tire?
Yes
What direction do the two front tires go on both front and rear? If youre installing two front tires. My front end is vibrating at top speeds.
They both point straight. Nothing if different. It’s going on a bike not a scooter. It’s made for the front of a scooter. You will need to deflate and even the bead around the rim to make it as perfect as u can. It’s hard to do. Easy to lay the bike down
What size motorcycle tires would you put on a 26 by 4 inch ebike rim?
.
110/70/22
hey could you tell me where you got your fork guards? i was thinking it would be nice to have but cant find the right one.
They come stock on the super73
is it possible to inslall other brand 110/70-16 ? Shinko is out of stock in my country.
Yes
First to comment 👆🏽
probably a silly question but since your rims are 20in and you're using 16'. My rims are 21in so I would have to get a 17' tire right?
The 73 rims are 16", bicycle tyres are measured by overall diameter, MV tyres are denoted by rim diameter
you wanna sell those super 73 tires if so I want them hopefully I'm first to ask tell me how much
If your local take ‘em for $20 a piece.
@@MrCentralDriver naw but I'll pay for shipping if you do postal or however if it but too much trouble. I'm in Virginia but I'd like to have them
Is that size for 20x4 tires?
yes
I had that same bead issue did you end up finding a way to fix it?
Just air it up slowly with moving the bead to center as best as possible
Do you still recommend?
Yep
How did you get the shinkos to balance properly on the wheel?
Make sure u don’t have any weight on the tire. Air it up while holding it even little by little. Move it around under low pressure if it’s uneven. It took me a few try’s.
Where the original tires 20" x 4"?
Yes
@@MrCentralDriver - Thanks!
@@MrCentralDriver - I clicked on your link and Amazon says they are "front" tires. But you used the "front" tires on both rims, correct?
this tire fit on a 16x3.0 moto rim ?
i dont think so
What's your tire pressure at?
30ish
@@MrCentralDriver front and rear? it's not bouncy or anything?
@@MrCentralDriver little high, use 20 rear 10 front
Put soap around edge of tyre, where it meets the rim, dishes soap
next time :)
tought about getting motorcycle tires on my ariel rider x but then found vee tire huntsman tires and their great just used motorcycle 3.5 tubes seemed like twice as thick vs stock
That’s good! Thicker tires so so much better for flats
@@MrCentralDriver what psi do you run on yours? i currently have 20 on myn i ride a lot on gravel.
Depending on the brand's particular tire characteristics the motorcycle tire with the heavier motorcycle tire and the heavier duty tire carcass is the one with the potential to reduce road punctures over time.
Once i hear you loose speed tork then it's a 💯no. UK 💋💯👍
You got that right! I’d only do it if I had more power or didn’t care to go fast and wanted to make sure I got no flats
Tt