• Required reading for all forum users!!!

    Welcome!
    Register to access the full functionality of the GSResources forum. Until you register and activate your account you will not have full forum access, nor will you be able to post or reply to messages.

    A note to new registrants...
    All new forum registrations must be activated via email before you have full access to the forum.

    A Special Note about Email accounts!
    DO NOT SIGN UP USING hotmail, outlook, gmx, sbcglobal, att, bellsouth or email.com. They delete our forum signup emails.

    A note to old forum members...
    I receive numerous requests from people who can no longer log in because their accounts were deleted. As mentioned in the forum FAQ, user accounts are deleted if you haven't logged in for the past 6 months. If you can't log in, then create a new forum account. If you don't get an error message, then check your email account for an activation message. If you get a message stating that the email address is already in use, then your account still exists so follow the instructions in the forum FAQ for resetting your password.

    Have you forgotten your password or have a new email address? Then read the forum FAQ for details on how to reset it.

    Any email requests for "can't log in anymore" problems or "lost my password" problems will be deleted. Read the forum FAQ and follow the instructions there - that's what we have one for...

  • Returning Visitors

    If you are a returning visitor who never received your confirmation email, then odds are your email provider is blockinig emails from our server. The only thing that can be done to get around this is you will have to try creating another forum account using an email address from another domain.

    If you are a returning visitor to the forum and can't log in using your old forum name and password but used to be able to then chances are your account is deleted. Purges of the databases are done regularly. You will have to create a new forum account and you should be all set.

Used Motorcycle Tires?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Schweisshund
  • Start date Start date
I agree new is always better than used. However, the "reasonable" price for replacing the set on my nighthawk is $140 for front tire plus $60 to mount it. $180 for the rear and $60 to mount it.

When I heard these prices I felt like they were asking me to bend over. I don't think those prices are reasonable.

Are you sh!ttin' me? Whatever shop that is, run far away from it and never return. I just bought (from a shop mind you, not online) a set of BT021 Z rated radials. The rear is a 190 wide, and these are top shelf tires. I paid $100 less than you got quoted with mounting them up. What are they trying to sell you? Michelin Pilot Race's?

You should be able to get decent tires for $300 mounted. Even at a shop. Online and mounting them myself I would save about $70, but I dispise mounting tires and this shop is very good to me. I like to keep him in buisness so I buy my tires through him. It's nice having a shop where I can get inspection stickers and such without even bringing in the bike, he'll let me borrow tools and he gives me great prices on all my gear. Every motorcyclist should have a shop they are "in" with.
 
shop around and check on ebay
i got a brand new 90/90 18 3x cheaper than the local tyre place wanted
it was brand new still wrapped and is well in date ect
fitting was 15 notes though
(at a local ish tyre place)

just adding it was a metzler tyre and not some cheaper brand
 
I strongly advise you to not mount used motorcycle tires, especially tubeless tires.

First, all tires are subject to road damage. An experienced eye can detect some of this damage. The lighting needs to be just so. Places where plies and components overlap inside the tire look just like damage to the untrained eye. I would expect that technicians who mount and dismount tires full time would get a good feel for identifying damaged tires. Motorcycle mechanics, who do it only part time, would rarely learn the skill.

Second, tubeless tires seal air inside between the rim and the bead. The rubber at the interface is hard and only seals if the rim is clean and undamaged, and if the bead is unkinked. Bead wire is stiff and brittle. It kinks easily when a tire is mounted or dismounted. Dismounting a tire is more likely to kink a bead than mounting a tire. In fact, most beads are kinked when the tire is dismounted. That means that a slow air leak is likely, with the strong possibility of dangerously low air pressure. I recommend that, if you mount a used motorcycle tire, you use and inner tube as a safeguard. (There went some of the cost savings!) If you don't do that, check air pressure every day.
 
The Suzuki dealership, literally right down the road from me, told me I could have as many of their used tires as I wanted. I was like ... seriously? The head mechanic said yes, that it was illegal to sell used motorcycle tires and they had to pay to get rid of them. Is this true?

REALLY? My friend who owns a motorcycle shop, PURPOSELY puts large slices in any tire that sits outside before they are taken away so they CAN'T be used. People like to sue up here, too! :mad:
Besides, as it's been said, a new Cheng Shin is better that a old, half worn out Michelin.
 
The last couple of sets of tires on my 700 have been racer take offs. I picked up a set of Michelin Power Pilots in a race compound for about $80 off Ebay last year. Just check them over good and look for the manufacturing dates and obvious punctures. If the bead isn't ruined and everything else looks okay then why not? I've run used tires for thousands of miles without any problems.
 
Last edited:
I always replace my tires just before they get to the wear bars.
So I have been adding to that pile of usable tires. I hate the cost of tires but think my life is worth it.
 
Secondhand tyres only have 2 uses: a swing for the kids or for getting fires going when you want to annoy the neighbourhood.
 
REALLY? My friend who owns a motorcycle shop, PURPOSELY puts large slices in any tire that sits outside before they are taken away so they CAN'T be used. People like to sue up here, too! :mad:
Besides, as it's been said, a new Cheng Shin is better that a old, half worn out Michelin.
I slash my old tires too before putting them out for the trash. No one is going to take one of my old tires, mount it, then sue me if it fails for making said tire available.

Sometimes you just gotta prevent stupidity.
 
Firestone factories used to slash their scrap tires. This was to prevent scroungers from taking tires from landfills, making a superficial repair, selling them, and the ultimate customer suing Firestone when the tires failed in service. The scroungers found ways to somehow hide a slash. So Firestone started cutting the beads out. Scroungers found ways to reattach beads. So Firestone began cutting out beads and grinding up the carcasses. I don't think that anyone has yet found a way to un-grind a tire.
 
I guess I should clarify my earlier post. The only used tires I have ever used have been take offs that racers use for a race or two and go to new tires. I've got GSXR wheels on my bike and good used race tires are readily available. This isn't really the case for stock GS wheels.
 
Last edited:
True that. My grandfather worked at Firestone for years. It was the grinding of tires that ultimately led to discovering new products like road materials, shingles, even doormats made from the residue. They turned it into a separate division.

You don't see too many retread shops these days. I know they use retreads on truck tires but not so much cars. Florida had a lot of these shops at one time, they sometimes did their own work.
 
For my first several years out of college, I ran retreads. They wore out quickly, and tended to leak air quickly, too. Handling wasn't good, but on a '63 Fairlane with terrible springs, handling sucked anyway.

Retreading makes a lot more sense with trucks. Fleets take better care of their tires than Joe Average does, so they are less likely to damage the carcasses. Retreads can NOT be used for steering axles, and I think that there are limits for drive axles. For trailers, most tires would be retreads. We still see the thrown treads all over.

What do our truck drivers say?
 
Last edited:
Retreads can be used for steering axles, and I think that there are limits for drive axles. For trailers, most tires would be retreads. We still see the thrown treads all over.

What do our truck drivers say?
On the contrary, retreads can NOT be used on the steering axle. :eek:

When I drove back in the '70s, we only ran Michelin tires. We got about 100,000 miles out of the original tread on the steering axle, had them capped (we found a capper that would return OUR carcasses to us), ran them another 100-150,000 miles on the drive axles, had them capped again, ran them another 200,000 or so on the trailers. By the time I left there, we had a few carcasses that were approaching a million miles, on about the fifth cap. :clap:

That being said, ...
I run on used tires on my motorcycles all the time. :-\\\
Only thing is, I have done all the using. :D
The only NEW tires are ones that have just come out of the mold. As soon as they are mounted and roll on the ground, they are "used".

.
 
Ive been using second hand tyres & racer take off for the last 30 years as & when times have been hard .... no problems to date

Having said that i do have my own personal rules when looking at a used tyre ...... condition must be worth the effort of mounting it (undamaged sidewalls & bead + no existing plugs)...... tyre must not be old (i always check the date code) ....... Tread must not be squared off ..... obvious miss matches with the other tyre i'm running are discarded

The choice is yours gents :)
 
Ive been using second hand tyres & racer take off for the last 30 years as & when times have been hard .... no problems to date

Having said that i do have my own personal rules when looking at a used tyre ...... condition must be worth the effort of mounting it (undamaged sidewalls & bead + no existing plugs)...... tyre must not be old (i always check the date code) ....... Tread must not be squared off ..... obvious miss matches with the other tyre i'm running are discarded

The choice is yours gents :)
Absolutely nothing wrong with take offs. It's always premium rubber that has even wear and are definitely well scrubbed in. It's nice getting $400-500 worth of tires for under $100. Plenty of miles left in them.
 
Back
Top