speedyebikenoob
1 kW
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2019
- Messages
- 333
amberwolf said:speedyebikenoob said:The stock tires on the bike are Bontrager XR2s, yeah the rear one wore really fast, but I guess that's to be expected when dumping 2400 watts on the rear wheel?
Not really, unless you're lifting it with your feet so you can spin it to burn rubber, or you skid it on the pavement a lot.
No idea what the TPI of those tires are though, but I ran them at around 40-45 psi. The front still seems fine though. I admit I was somewhat careless with these tires, I didn't check the tire pressure as much as I normally would but I don't think it ever dropped below 35.
What pressure range do they list on the side of the tire?
Too low pressure can allow sidewalls to flex so much that they begin to peel and crack (a problem I've had with Kendas regardless of tire pressure), and then the fabric begins to tear, and the tube can herniate out the side and catch on rim brakes or frame and be torn open.
But if that wasn't the failure mode, then pressure isn't likely the issue.
That shouldn't matter--it shoudl actually *help* because it keeps the wheel on the ground, helping to prevent spin, which like skidding during braking causes excessive wear.The rear tire is worn to the point where the "nubby" things in the center of the tire are non existent and completely flat. I think it also might have wore out so quickly because I originally had the battery at the back of the bike for the first hundred miles,
If the surfaces it's used on are very rough, sharp edged, they'll wear faster, or if there's sand on a hard surface, or stuff like the flinty dust we get around here that acts like sandpaper dust on the roads (worse on concrete paths), they'll also wear faster.
The softer the compound, the grippier the tire...but the quicker they wear out.
Given the choice, I prefer grippier, even if I have to replace them more often, because if I have to make a sudden avoidance maneuver due to other traffic, I need to know the tires will stick if I want them to. However..I also want to be *able* to break them loose to slew the trike out of the way quicker than I could by just steering, so the tires I'm using are moped Shinko SR714s (IIRC--sometimes I misrememeber the number, but you can find them in my SB Cruiser thread), which are fairly sticky, but will still let me "drift" the rear end if I manipulate brake and power and shift my weight correctly, so if I have to I can change lanes in a few feet at most, instead of a few trike lengths (or I can make a corner without tipping the trike by drifting partly around it, if someone is tailgating me at a speed higher than I can normally turn at).
(I use the moped tires because of their thickness and multi-ply construction, which along with thick moped tubes help keep me from having to deal with flats).
Anyway....the wear doesn't have anything to do with "speed ratings" of the tires.![]()
It says the max is 50 PSI. I thought MTB tires wear faster on pavement than they would offroad? Whoa you can drift your trike?
