Denver_FJR
Well-known member
I appreciate those who post their "mea culpa" moments. I try to learn from them and now is my turn to give back.
Prepping for a trip and mounted a new Avon Storm Ultra on rear. Headed out to run errands and pick up trip items. About two miles from home making a right turn in 2nd gear at probably 15~20 mph, applied gas coming out of turn and hear we go... back end starts to slide out, catches, then a nice little high side.
I've had couple sets of tires mounted on the FJR before and a set on previous bike as well. I've never slipped a new tire during scrub in and even during normal riding I've rarely slipped a tire other than usual places like painted cross walk strips or some oily intersections. Looking back I see the chain of events that led up to this:
In the future I will dedicate a parking lot session where I can scrub in new tires at increasing lean angle in controlled manner. Searching forum for tire scrubbing advice I've heard folks mention "just take it easy" (very true) and even more casual response like having new tires mounted during trip, then resuming riding two up and never had a problem.
Respect those new skins or suffer the consequences!
Prepping for a trip and mounted a new Avon Storm Ultra on rear. Headed out to run errands and pick up trip items. About two miles from home making a right turn in 2nd gear at probably 15~20 mph, applied gas coming out of turn and hear we go... back end starts to slide out, catches, then a nice little high side.
I've had couple sets of tires mounted on the FJR before and a set on previous bike as well. I've never slipped a new tire during scrub in and even during normal riding I've rarely slipped a tire other than usual places like painted cross walk strips or some oily intersections. Looking back I see the chain of events that led up to this:
- Due to past experience, I had become complacent to risk associated with new tires.
- The ride out of my neighborhood up to the right turn had practically no lean due to the low speed limits. The amount of lean needed for the right turn put the contact patch on virgin rubber.
- I certainly didn't "whack" the throttle, but it was obviously too much.
In the future I will dedicate a parking lot session where I can scrub in new tires at increasing lean angle in controlled manner. Searching forum for tire scrubbing advice I've heard folks mention "just take it easy" (very true) and even more casual response like having new tires mounted during trip, then resuming riding two up and never had a problem.
Respect those new skins or suffer the consequences!