Jim writes:
> Hi Gang,
>
> I know this has been gone over several times, but I just
couldn't help
> myself. I am sitting here as I write this, looking at the
Dennis Kirk dirt
> bike catalog for tires. I have read on the list that the
following tires are
> good dual sport selections: Kenda 270, Pirelli MT21, and IRC
GP-1/GP-110.
> When looking at these tires and comparing the tread design with
tires like
> the: Avon Gripster, Michelin Sirac, Pirelli MT-70, and Dunlop's
Trailmax, the
> first group appears to be a severe knobby design. These don't
appear as if
> they would provide good road traction in the twisties or on wet
pavement.
> Meanwhile, the second group appears as if they would provide
good road
> handling on the street, but not much better performance than
the stock tires
> in the dirt. To be honest with ya'll, I'm confused. I spend
most of my time
> on the street commuting, touring, or searching for that
inviting trail to who
> knows where. Yet, when I find that trail, I tend to take even
some of the
> roughest ones because they usually go to the coolest places.
What do I need
> to put on my bike for the best performance in this scenario? I
lean my bike
> over quite a bit on the street, and I am a little concerned
about losing
> traction with the way the first set of knobbies look. Can you
guys/girls
> share your experience with me and educate me on the current
state of affairs
> for tires on the KLR? Thank you, please forgive my ignorance in
this matter,
> tires have always confused me.
>
> Jim Sherlock
In the "Old Days" they used to call all these tires
"Universals" - which meant that they universally didn't work
anywhere.
I've tried a bunch of stuff and found nothing better at
"all-around" than Avon AM-24 Gripsters. I liked the Avon
AV33/AV34 combo, the Dunlop 604 (wears unevenly, tho), and the
Pirelli MT80, but those are all way more money. Surprisingly, the
Dunlop 750's that come stock are pretty good - they just arent
long-lived (maybe 5K?). Since I ride 95% of my miles on pavement
or forest roads, it doesn't make sense to me to run anything more
aggessive tread-wise, plus I like to trust my tires when
cornering on pavement and I've been real pleased with the
Gripsters that way.
Maybe the reason there's no clear consensus on the best "all
around" tire is that there isn't any such thing - only choices
for specific kinds of riding.
Tom Bowman
Atlanta
A14 "Stella Kowalski"