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Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 7:39 am
by Nanna10r
Depends on tyres/bike/use.
Oh & dont forget construction considerations. Better built tyre needs less pressure to work better for Nana's like myself.
I usually start with 34 - 38 & settle at 32 - 34.
Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 10:34 am
by mfzx6r
34 front and 36 rear for me
Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 3:07 pm
by Strika
I checked the beemers tyres this morning after it felt a little rubbery on the way home last night. Naturally enough, 19psi in the front and 22 in the rear! Perfect!

Yeah...so I added a few to that! Didn't really change the bike much but! still feels rubbery!

Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 3:36 pm
by petro
I had a few rear tyre slides when I was running 38 in the rear with powers, haven't had that with 36 though.
Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 3:42 pm
by javaman
I found out running 36F/48R gives good milage and less drag so it feels lighter.
Just brake plenty before corners

Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 7:28 pm
by Neka79
javaman wrote:I found out running 36F/48R gives good milage and less drag so it feels lighter.
Just brake plenty before corners

48?? 48?? forty fucking eight??
mate u must have balls the size of coconuts...
Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 9:08 pm
by javaman
Neka79 wrote:javaman wrote:I found out running 36F/48R gives good milage and less drag so it feels lighter.
Just brake plenty before corners

48?? 48?? forty fucking eight??
mate u must have balls the size of coconuts...
Thank you.
But you obviously havent ridden a 2000 ZX6R

Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 11:50 pm
by Neka79
javaman wrote:Neka79 wrote:javaman wrote:I found out running 36F/48R gives good milage and less drag so it feels lighter.
Just brake plenty before corners

48?? 48?? forty fucking eight??
mate u must have balls the size of coconuts...
Thank you.
But you obviously havent ridden a 2000 ZX6R

hahaha ummm....
i had a 99 zx6r..and ive ridden a 01 zx6r....lol...
Posted: Sat May 05, 2007 6:51 pm
by Gosling1
Posted: Sun May 06, 2007 9:48 am
by Strika
javaman wrote:Neka79 wrote:javaman wrote:I found out running 36F/48R gives good milage and less drag so it feels lighter.
Just brake plenty before corners

48?? 48?? forty fucking eight??
mate u must have balls the size of coconuts...
Thank you.
But you obviously havent ridden a 2000 ZX6R

Andi, most tyres have a maximum pressure rating! ie; the max amount of air alowwed to be stuffed into it. I have a strange feeling 48 Psi, may well exceed that! You run the risk of the tyre tearing from the inside out!

Posted: Sun May 06, 2007 3:14 pm
by Waldorf
Well, at the moment I'm running 32F and 0R on the Zed.

That made me discover that Marranda
was running 21F and 24R..
(Gotta love multiple bike households!)
Now the ZX6R is comfortable on 32F 34R.

Z is still 32F and 0R..

Posted: Sun May 06, 2007 8:56 pm
by javaman
Strika wrote:javaman wrote:Neka79 wrote:
48?? 48?? forty fucking eight??
mate u must have balls the size of coconuts...
Thank you.
But you obviously havent ridden a 2000 ZX6R

Andi, most tyres have a maximum pressure rating! ie; the max amount of air alowwed to be stuffed into it. I have a strange feeling 48 Psi, may well exceed that! You run the risk of the tyre tearing from the inside out!

The normal pressure recommended on the J1 is 42psi. I found this to be too soft due to very plush suspension. I increased the pressure gradually and found 48 to be the most confident inspiring ... with exception on bumpy roads e.g. gippsland. It's so much less of tyre drag that it kept up with new gsxr750 on a stright line
Hmm that's bit worrying if it tears up from the inside but my understanding a tyre can withstand 3x the recommended pressure ?
Posted: Sun May 13, 2007 3:49 pm
by GForce
mate seriously, 48psi on the rear is mental. every tyre is diff so i can understand the psi can differ but 48???? sure it might feel better and lighter but you are more likely to stack it around a corner.
im not telling you to change it but just be careful
Posted: Wed May 16, 2007 2:22 pm
by Wardy
Depends on a lot of things, for the road it doesn't matter that much but when on the track you should try and get it right. Read a few articles about reading tyres or speak to a suspension/tyre guy and then adjust accordingly. Can come down to just 1/2 psi between getting it right or wearing out a tyre in 20mins for some brands.
Posted: Wed May 16, 2007 3:23 pm
by NovaCoder
I've been running my track bike (SV650S) at 30/30 (cold) with Pilot Power's although I've been thinking of upping it to 32/30 (increases stability when cold).
For the road I'd prob run 34/36.