HaulinAshe
Well-known member
I now have over 4,000 on the Pirelli Diablo Strada front, and just over 2,000 on the Strada-E rear.
The front has developed the rumble noise, but only at times, and only when you are leaning off upright in turns. Grumpy said he had some tires do the same thing. It's not anything wrong, it just makes some noise as the tread in contact with the road changes from the solid rubber middle, to the grooved pattern sides.
This past weekend I ran about 600 miles in the rain. The last 200 were on mostly dry pavement with very wet leaves and wet pine needles everywhere. The rear voluntarily slipped out many times under a hard 4th gear twist as I passed across the stripes, while passing cagers. But this was not anything I did not expect and I felt the Diablo regained traction very predictably and somewhat quicker than I would typically expect. Never had to back out of the throttle. Just had to squeeze the tank hard and manage the big girl's ass.
Dry road performance is still excellent with no signs of that troubling sweeper wobble that I felt with softer tires. Turn-in is definitely more predictable than with the Mich PRs. You can tell that the stiffer sidewall of the Diablo makes it a more predictable tire than the Mich, IMHO. Can't say that the Diablo does anything significantly better, it just does its best every single time with much less variance than the Mich PRs. Hope this makes sense.
Am determined that the next set I put on will have some type of wear indicator in the center. I plan to experiment with the old tire and determine approx how much tread depth is available in the center stripe. Probably will use a Dremel bit to bore a tread indicator hole in the center rubber to a predetermined depth. If anyone has good knowledge of just how deep that should be... PLEASE SHARE and save me some experimentation.
At this point I would rate the Pirelli Diablo Strada as the best performing "road" tire that I have run on the FJR. Not sure if it's really worth the horrible pain of mounting that beast when doing my own tires. The Mich was a piece of cake compared to that stiff-walled, rim fighting devil Diablo! Can you spell tire machine?
Just thinking out loud as promised. Hoping to repay some of the great advice and info everyone has shared with me about tires. I'll post a final when this rear and front both meet their maker in a few thousand more.
The front has developed the rumble noise, but only at times, and only when you are leaning off upright in turns. Grumpy said he had some tires do the same thing. It's not anything wrong, it just makes some noise as the tread in contact with the road changes from the solid rubber middle, to the grooved pattern sides.
This past weekend I ran about 600 miles in the rain. The last 200 were on mostly dry pavement with very wet leaves and wet pine needles everywhere. The rear voluntarily slipped out many times under a hard 4th gear twist as I passed across the stripes, while passing cagers. But this was not anything I did not expect and I felt the Diablo regained traction very predictably and somewhat quicker than I would typically expect. Never had to back out of the throttle. Just had to squeeze the tank hard and manage the big girl's ass.
Dry road performance is still excellent with no signs of that troubling sweeper wobble that I felt with softer tires. Turn-in is definitely more predictable than with the Mich PRs. You can tell that the stiffer sidewall of the Diablo makes it a more predictable tire than the Mich, IMHO. Can't say that the Diablo does anything significantly better, it just does its best every single time with much less variance than the Mich PRs. Hope this makes sense.
Am determined that the next set I put on will have some type of wear indicator in the center. I plan to experiment with the old tire and determine approx how much tread depth is available in the center stripe. Probably will use a Dremel bit to bore a tread indicator hole in the center rubber to a predetermined depth. If anyone has good knowledge of just how deep that should be... PLEASE SHARE and save me some experimentation.
At this point I would rate the Pirelli Diablo Strada as the best performing "road" tire that I have run on the FJR. Not sure if it's really worth the horrible pain of mounting that beast when doing my own tires. The Mich was a piece of cake compared to that stiff-walled, rim fighting devil Diablo! Can you spell tire machine?
Just thinking out loud as promised. Hoping to repay some of the great advice and info everyone has shared with me about tires. I'll post a final when this rear and front both meet their maker in a few thousand more.