Barabus
Well-known member
Well, I had some excitement today. My rear tire blew out on the I-605 in the car pool lane at about 80 mph with cruise control activated. The Avon Storm ST had about 5400 miles on it and was due to be replaced soon. Ultimately, the tire was punctured and then sidewall ruptured some time after that. In hind sight, I should have noticed the rear tire deflating due to the puncture. The 605 is grooved concrete. I started to notice the "I am riding on grooved concrete" feeling more and more. I was looking around at my front and wondering why the bike was turning in a lethargic manner. Just as a motorist motioned to my back tire, the sidewall ruptured and I really started fish tailing.
The first two lanes of traffic backed off and let me to the side. However, as I went to merged into the number one lane, that motorist shut the door on me. She probably didn't know I was having problems. In any event, the swerve back into the number two lane was a real "E ticket ride". My tire seemed to break its bead and almost come off. I wobbled to a stop and called for a tow.
The tire was smoking slightly and very hot. The rupture to the sidewall was large enough for three fingers side by side. The tire tore off part of the under tail- a 6"x9" mud guard that helps keep the rear shock clean. The Tow driver strapped my bike down, but scrapped my front fender with a tow strap. The tow was $250 for a 23 mile ride home. I did not have AAA for my motorcycles (have it for my cars). The tire was $136 and $30 to install at Cycle Gear. At some point in the incident my rim got slightly bent and the tire installation guy gave me the name of Doctor Johnny in HB.
I wish I would have pulled over during those 2-3 minutes when I knew the bike was not handling right. I had a plug kit and compressor. I could have picked a nice exit and had a Coke while doing the repair. Instead I was in a hurry to get to the Crest and run some twisties. Lesson learned since I almost had a fall. The tire could have dislodged during my merge and that could have been it.
Stay safe out there and don't be in too big of a hurry!!
The first two lanes of traffic backed off and let me to the side. However, as I went to merged into the number one lane, that motorist shut the door on me. She probably didn't know I was having problems. In any event, the swerve back into the number two lane was a real "E ticket ride". My tire seemed to break its bead and almost come off. I wobbled to a stop and called for a tow.
The tire was smoking slightly and very hot. The rupture to the sidewall was large enough for three fingers side by side. The tire tore off part of the under tail- a 6"x9" mud guard that helps keep the rear shock clean. The Tow driver strapped my bike down, but scrapped my front fender with a tow strap. The tow was $250 for a 23 mile ride home. I did not have AAA for my motorcycles (have it for my cars). The tire was $136 and $30 to install at Cycle Gear. At some point in the incident my rim got slightly bent and the tire installation guy gave me the name of Doctor Johnny in HB.
I wish I would have pulled over during those 2-3 minutes when I knew the bike was not handling right. I had a plug kit and compressor. I could have picked a nice exit and had a Coke while doing the repair. Instead I was in a hurry to get to the Crest and run some twisties. Lesson learned since I almost had a fall. The tire could have dislodged during my merge and that could have been it.
Stay safe out there and don't be in too big of a hurry!!