tyre patterns
I'd say you can in normal riding. I had an M2 rear with a pilot power front for 4500 miles. I got a nail in the rear tire, plugged it, drove slow to the nearest bike shop and bought what he had. But I ride kinda easy and I would say if you are gonna push it hard, you want the compounds to match due to temperture/grip levels.
Most tyre companies like to sell them as sets, in the (bad) old days, tyre profile front & rear, from different makes (square blocks & rounds tyre profiles), could be totally different, and in lean angles could cause some serious adhesion problems, (as in front or rear runs out of contact before the other tyre & the rider is aware of it) & whoops, away you goes. These days, this does not present a problem. The profiles are identical on sports bike tyres, the only difference being tread patters & rubber compounds. They like to sell them as sets, most companies stating that the front tyres are designed to work in unison with the rear (as in say, clearing a better contact path in the wet for the rear) I agree with fishfryer about getting similiar compound, although I have run a Sports tourer on the front and Sports on the front (& vice versa) from the same manufacturer without any probs. The only other advice that I can give is, don't cheap out, buy the best tyre you can afford. Even at the best of times you only have a little over 2 inches of tyre footprint on the road.
ORIGINAL: fishfryer527
you want the compounds to match due to temperture/grip levels.
you want the compounds to match due to temperture/grip levels.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



