Valkyrie Riders Cruiser Club
November 20, 2025, 08:09:53 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Ultimate Seats Link VRCC Store
Homepage : Photostash : JustPics : Shoptalk : Old Tech Archive : Classifieds : Contact Staff
News: If you're new to this message board, read THIS!
 
MarkT Exhaust
Pages: [1]   Go Down
Print
Author Topic: mounted my last tire?  (Read 1378 times)
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« on: August 21, 2016, 09:48:46 AM »

I changed the low profile Pirelli rear tire I had on Chewie yesterday. Those
things are harder than the not-low-profile ones like on regular Valkyries.
If people have gaskets, I probably blew a couple  coolsmiley ... whew. Plus,
the new Valkyrie's wheels are painted. I scratch them up when I change
them.

I'm thinking of buying my next tire over at Cycle Gear, bring over the
wheel and let them mount it. Doing it that way will cost a lot more,
and equates to a "reduction of independence"... anyone get tires mounted
there?

Home-made Chewie adapter... it actually rained a little the last couple of
days  cooldude , so I won't complain about the humidly-fogged-up camera lens...
The adapter cradles the bottom of the motor and fits to the shock link.



I put these screw-jacks under the engine guards, Chewie is stable...



De-scratch... blegghh on painted wheels, what were they smoking? I guess
not many people change GoldWing tires with just a couple of tire irons...



Chewie's front wheel is so unbalanced that the regular amount of RideOn
won't balance it. So I balanced just the wheel before I mounted it (the front
tire is easy to take on and off). I went ahead and did the same on the rear,
I'll just submit to having ugly weights on there. I don't need weights on
my regular Valkyrie, RideOn does the trick there, but when I used weights,
it was those nice clip-on weights. Only stick-on weights work on new-Valkyrie
wheels...

Are there wheel-shops that will turn (or whatever) your wheels so that
they are balanced?

-Mike

« Last Edit: August 21, 2016, 09:50:32 AM by hubcapsc » Logged

Jess from VA
Member
*****
Posts: 30865


No VA


« Reply #1 on: August 21, 2016, 10:19:29 AM »

Mike, it depends on the shop.

My guy, when I ask, will take the time to move the tire around on the wheel a couple times to use the least weight possible.  My GATTs car tires in back are nearly perfectly balanced new, so only a little wight for the wheel is necessary.

Rear bike tires used to take more tries. 
Logged
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #2 on: August 21, 2016, 10:32:09 AM »

Mike, it depends on the shop.

My guy, when I ask, will take the time to move the tire around on the wheel a couple times to use the least weight possible.  My GATTs car tires in back are nearly perfectly balanced new, so only a little wight for the wheel is necessary.

Rear bike tires used to take more tries. 

I don't know how they'd do it, turning on a lathe is just something that
popped into my imagination, but what I'm wondering is if there's people
in custom wheel shops that could "do something" to a wheel (sans tire)
so that the wheel would be balanced. Lots of tires today need almost
no extra balancing, and RideOn takes care of that...

-Mike
Logged

Jess from VA
Member
*****
Posts: 30865


No VA


« Reply #3 on: August 21, 2016, 10:55:09 AM »

Well the (Honda) shop has some kind of electronic balancer, and I'm not allowed back there to watch (anymore).

When I did watch, he was not balancing the wheel first.  Tire was on wheel at some start point (dot or no dot), and he checked balance.  If it was a bunch of weights to balance, he would take the shrader out again, let the air out, break the bead and move the tire 180 or so, and do it again; to see if it balanced with less weight.  Maybe a third time.  He's good, and busy, and I didn't ask a lot of questions to slow him down.  Some of it maybe be voodoo.  

I've never used Ride-On, but probably should.  (wouldn't use beads)

He's done every tire on both bikes for a number of years, and I've never had a balance issue.  I call him direct on his Cphone (not the service mgr) and make a Sat appointment at his convenience.  Then I'm in and out.

« Last Edit: August 21, 2016, 11:05:08 AM by Jess from VA » Logged
..
Member
*****
Posts: 27796


Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #4 on: August 21, 2016, 11:22:24 AM »

Cycle Gear will also price match online pricing. I think they now charge $35 for a tire change with balance.
Logged
Dusty
Member
*****
Posts: 380


Mill Bay B.C.


« Reply #5 on: August 21, 2016, 11:42:52 AM »

If  I wanted to balance a rim. I would Remove the tire and  Put the  rim on Harbour Freight balancer. After  Finding the heavy spot I would Use a small rotary sander to take some material off the inside of the rim  in the thickest part of the rim where the heavy spot is . I would check often with the balancer if the heavy spot  starts to move. It would get me close enough that I would not have to balance much.  I would not do this if it was my first balancing job.  Shocked Shocked Shocked  I would practice on some thing  that my life did not depend on .    uglystupid2 uglystupid2  I would try an old bicycle wheel  cooldude cooldude

 I also checked both my rims without the tires on the balancer to find the heavy spot of the rim. I measured from the valve to the heavy spot and wrote that measurement  in my repair manual. When I take the tires in for replacement I mark the heavy spot of the rim with a marker  for the installer.


Dusty
Logged
indybobm
Member
*****
Posts: 1602

Franklin, Indiana VRCC # 5258


« Reply #6 on: August 21, 2016, 11:46:53 AM »

I have to ask, why is the newspaper on the tire?
Logged

So many roads, so little time
VRCC # 5258
The emperor has no clothes
Member
*****
Posts: 29945


« Reply #7 on: August 21, 2016, 11:49:11 AM »

I have to ask, why is the newspaper on the tire?
It looks like he painted over the scratches he put on the rim.
Logged
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #8 on: August 21, 2016, 01:10:40 PM »

I have to ask, why is the newspaper on the tire?
It looks like he painted over the scratches he put on the rim.

My father was a sign painter. I remember him painting the sidewalls of the tires
on his truck after he'd wash it (back in the 60's)... I just sand away at my scratches
a little with 1000 grit, clean the surface real good, cover the rubber (don't want
to paint my sidewalls  Smiley ) and spritz a little Krylon on there...

-Mike
Logged

The emperor has no clothes
Member
*****
Posts: 29945


« Reply #9 on: August 21, 2016, 01:12:35 PM »

I have to ask, why is the newspaper on the tire?
It looks like he painted over the scratches he put on the rim.

My father was a sign painter. I remember him painting the sidewalls of the tires
on his truck after he'd wash it (back in the 60's)... I just sand away at my scratches
a little with 1000 grit, clean the surface real good, cover the rubber (don't want
to paint my sidewalls  Smiley ) and spritz a little Krylon on there...

-Mike
It matches real well.  cooldude
Logged
Mr Whiskey
Member
*****
Posts: 2531


Tennessee


« Reply #10 on: August 21, 2016, 05:20:11 PM »

Cycle Gear will also price match online pricing. I think they now charge $35 for a tire change with balance.
Thanks, been lookin' for someone to mount a front tire for the Wing.
Everybody here wants $40/$45 + tax. Some also want a disposal fee.
Cheapest I found shocked me, dealer at $34.08 all in, but you could spend a whole Sat. there waiting. I'll give Cycle Gear a call cooldude

P.S. Actually, I called Wheeler's over near Robinsville, Nc. by accident & he said $20 carry in.
Logged

Peace, Whiskey.
..
Member
*****
Posts: 27796


Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #11 on: August 21, 2016, 06:05:53 PM »

Cycle Gear will also price match online pricing. I think they now charge $35 for a tire change with balance.
Thanks, been lookin' for someone to mount a front tire for the Wing.
Everybody here wants $40/$45 + tax. Some also want a disposal fee.
Cheapest I found shocked me, dealer at $34.08 all in, but you could spend a whole Sat. there waiting. I'll give Cycle Gear a call cooldude

P.S. Actually, I called Wheeler's over near Robinsville, Nc. by accident & he said $20 carry in.


Cycle Gear is carry in as well.

Wheeler's is a good place.
Logged
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #12 on: August 21, 2016, 06:19:14 PM »

Cycle Gear will also price match online pricing. I think they now charge $35 for a tire change with balance.

$35 and a drive over to Greenville doesn't sound so bad. They do claim to price match...

https://www.cyclegear.com/best-price-guarantee

They won't price match Amazon but I think they will price match Jake Wilson...

They've been nice to me numerous times. People who change tires often have some
clip on weights that have been removed from wheels they've balanced... years ago
I asked the Cycle Gear guy if he had any of those nice ones like Honda used on
the original Valkyries, and rooted around in there and gave me a handful. The other day
I needed stick-on weights and went there because they had them on their web page.
They didn't have any in stock, so they just gave me about 25 new ones from their
mounting station...

-Mike
Logged

..
Member
*****
Posts: 27796


Maggie Valley, NC


« Reply #13 on: August 21, 2016, 06:21:57 PM »

I use a local car tire place. Mr Sanchez charges me $20 including disposal for a carry in.
Logged
Mr Whiskey
Member
*****
Posts: 2531


Tennessee


« Reply #14 on: August 21, 2016, 06:37:52 PM »

I use a local car tire place. Mr Sanchez charges me $20 including disposal for a carry in.
Lucky Dog!
I've called every car tire place in town too, no one will touch it.
Thinkin' 'bout wearing tire over to Wheeler's & tearin' it down in parking lot 2funny
Logged

Peace, Whiskey.
Bighead
Member
*****
Posts: 8654


Madison Alabama


« Reply #15 on: August 21, 2016, 06:50:36 PM »

I have a local car tire place that has a guy that does nothing but MC's and they do it for $20 carry in plus $2 disposal no tax.
Logged

1997 Bumble Bee
1999 Interstate (sold)
2016 Wing
threevalks
Member
*****
Posts: 509


Letart, WV


« Reply #16 on: August 21, 2016, 07:12:29 PM »

          Local tire guy, charges $10, carry in. Mike next time forget the jack, just lay bike on its side, remove tire. Changed rear tire on Wing last month, easy peasy.
Logged

If you're gonna be stupid, ya gota be tough
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #17 on: August 21, 2016, 07:31:52 PM »

          Local tire guy, charges $10, carry in. Mike next time forget the jack, just lay bike on its side, remove tire. Changed rear tire on Wing last month, easy peasy.

I've watched them do that on Utoob. Jacking the bike is easy-peasy enough, thanks  Smiley ...

-Mike
Logged

hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #18 on: August 22, 2016, 06:20:22 AM »


OK, I just went and mounted the wheel on the bike. It's
Monday morning. Sunday mostly amounted to going to
Church, eating at Fuddrucker's, taking a nap and then
watching another episode of that British show "The
Last Kingdom".

I think I worked too hard on Saturday  coolsmiley

My new front tire is a 120/70 19, instead of a 130/60 19,
since there's almost no choices in that size. Both new tires
are Avons. Both have that "ZR" rating. Harley V-Rods also
have this weirdo tire size (130/60) and Avon recommends
my tire for them, must be good for me too:

120/70ZR-19 = Harley-Davidson V-Rod

Smokin' Joe gave Chewie her nickname - she eats
tires... we'll see how these do... off to work to test them out.

-Mike
Logged

hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #19 on: August 22, 2016, 07:59:34 AM »


New rubber muy good  Smiley

-Mike
Logged

Mr Whiskey
Member
*****
Posts: 2531


Tennessee


« Reply #20 on: August 22, 2016, 09:48:17 AM »

Yep, those "ZR" tires are great,
but they don't last long.
Jus' ordered one for the Wing,
I'll be thrilled if I get 8K!
Logged

Peace, Whiskey.
The emperor has no clothes
Member
*****
Posts: 29945


« Reply #21 on: August 22, 2016, 11:37:48 AM »


New rubber muy good  Smiley

-Mike
I thought Avons were made in Great Britain not Spain.  Smiley
Logged
Mr Whiskey
Member
*****
Posts: 2531


Tennessee


« Reply #22 on: August 23, 2016, 02:31:04 PM »

Hey Mike, ever thought about tryin' to swap in a Wing wheel?
I jus' got one of these (130/70/18) for less than a bill.
http://www.americanmototire.com/catalog/product_info.php?manufacturers_id=734&products_id=675&osCsid=195c9382e6d3947a0e05389ba24597f5

Here's a set of F6B's, I think they're the same size as a standard Wing.
http://gl1800riders.com/forums/6-gl1800-classifieds-4-sale-owner/307042-f6b-set-wheels-sale.html
« Last Edit: August 23, 2016, 02:42:58 PM by Mr Whiskey » Logged

Peace, Whiskey.
hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #23 on: August 23, 2016, 03:20:11 PM »


New rubber muy good  Smiley

-Mike
I thought Avons were made in Great Britain not Spain.  Smiley

Oh yes... New rubber has things bloody sorted!

-Mike
Logged

hubcapsc
Member
*****
Posts: 16801


upstate

South Carolina


« Reply #24 on: August 23, 2016, 03:23:36 PM »

Hey Mike, ever thought about tryin' to swap in a Wing wheel?
I jus' got one of these (130/70/18) for less than a bill.
http://www.americanmototire.com/catalog/product_info.php?manufacturers_id=734&products_id=675&osCsid=195c9382e6d3947a0e05389ba24597f5

Here's a set of F6B's, I think they're the same size as a standard Wing.
http://gl1800riders.com/forums/6-gl1800-classifieds-4-sale-owner/307042-f6b-set-wheels-sale.html


My forks seem different, I'll have to compare to your Wing, or someone's Wing, at the meet-in-the-middle
ride... I think I really like the tire that's on there now, and there's a bunch of tires to choose
from in 120/70 19...

I wonder if the Wing bag-tip-over guard would fit on my bike? My sub-frame is different, so
probably not...

-Mike
Logged

Pages: [1]   Go Up
Print
Jump to: