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Mother Goose
Tue Mar 8th, 2011, 02:43 PM
PLEASE only post about your tires. We don't want this jumbled up with a bunch of talking (typing). If you make a comment that does not have the following information, it will be deleted.


Bike:
Tires/Size:
Mileage on tires:
Type of riding:
Review:


Bike: 2008 Yamaha R1
Tires: Dunlop Q2 - 120/70 F 190/55 R
Mileage on tires: 4000ish (still on the bike)
Type of riding: Commute whenever there isn't snow on the ground. Hit the canyons at least 3 weekends out of the month (9/10 are 2 up). Have 1 track day at HPR on them.
Review: Best tire I've ever had, on any bike. They are good to go as soon as you mount them up. Heat up very fast and instantly had confidence in them. HIGHLY recommended.

asp_125
Tue Mar 8th, 2011, 03:14 PM
- Previous set

Bike - 2008 Suzuki GSX-R600
Tires - 120/180 Dunlop Sportmax Roadsmart
Mileage - 8000
Riding - Everything: commute, rain, canyons, tours, except track day

Review: same profile as the Qualifier with multi stage compound for street durability. Progressive tip-in (not peaked) and grip in dry or wet. Great sport touring tire erring on the Sport side. As with any dual compound tire when you wear off the sides there is a slight bump in the middle from the harder compound, but you don't notice it at all when riding.

Current tires -

Dunlop Q2's 120/180
Mileage - 2000 so far
Riding - Touring, canyons

Verdict - Great tires! Same tried and true progressive tip-in. Lean it and it instantly responds, holds a line with a bit of countersteer, unlike Michelins which feel neutral once leaned over so I've heard. Same impressions as Wicky. Good wet handling. Even wear so far.

OUTLAWD
Tue Mar 8th, 2011, 04:09 PM
Bike: 2003 Triumph Sprint ST
Tires/Size: Continental Road Attacks - 120/180
Mileage on tires: 8000
Type of riding: Commuting/canyons
Review: Constant radius makes for steady turn in and ease of direction changes while leaned over. Overheating issues when on the edge in long turns on 100+ deg days.

Bike: 2003 Triumph Sprint ST
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT - 120/180
Mileage on tires: 6000
Type of riding: Touring/canyons/trackdays(PMP)
Review: Quick turn in, very stable mid-turn. Softer edge went away quickly with track riding, but stuck like glue.

Bike: 2003 Triumph Sprint ST
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Road 2 - 120/180
Mileage on tires: 8000
Type of riding: Touring/canyons
Review: Slower turn in, great in rain and on grooved roads. Front pushed when riding hard (double +10)

Bike: 2003 GSXR 750
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT 120/180
Mileage on tires: F 4500/R 3000
Type of riding: Canyons/trackdays(HPR)
Review: Quick turn in, very stable mid-turn. Softer edge went away quickly with track riding(HPR is abrasive, sides bald within 2 trackdays)


Bike: 2003 GSXR 750
Tires/Size: Bridgestone BT-003 RS (street) 120/180
Mileage on tires: 3500
Type of riding: Trackdays/Canyons
Review: Good in dry, not so great in wet. Very quick turn in. Great in the canyons, but overheated rear at HPR in long turns. Overheated front and rear at PPIR. Lost 3/4 of their life in <2 trackdays. Front and rear wore pretty evenly, felt good even after the sips were gone.

Bike: 2003 Triumph Sprint ST
Tires/Size: Bridgestone BT-003 RS (street) 120/190
Mileage on tires: Front/Rear 3300/2600
Type of riding: Canyons (double, double +5)
Review: Good in dry, didn't push it in wet, not good at all in gravel ;). Very quick turn in. Great in the canyons, Front and rear wore pretty evenly, but rear got flat-spotted easily on heavy bike. Seemes to follow grooves in the road.

CYCLE_MONKEY
Tue Mar 8th, 2011, 07:24 PM
Bike: 2001 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'1"/215lbs
Tires/Size: Metzler M1's; 190/55 and 120/70
Mileage on tires: 3,250-4,500 miles
Type of riding: Mostly canyon, pretty elevated pace, sometimes 2-up, maybe 40% commuting.
Review: They were the first replacement I put on after the original Bridgestones wore out. This tire REALLY made me appreciate the bike. I felt VERY comfortable, immediately on these tires. Maybe a little tougher to turn in because of the more rounded profile, but they were extremely trustworthy, and the handling didn't change much even at the end when they were squared off from highway use since they started off more rounder in the first place. Never had a traction problem, only got the rear to slip a little under power in the dry on a few occasions, in very tight turns. Did a couple of trackdays on 2 different sets, and even when they got hot and a little greasy, they got to a certain point and didn't get any greasier, and stayed very predictable the whole time. I felt very comfortable sliding around on them for the first time, like my dirtbike! Loved 'em, but the rear wore out quick and I'd get 2 rears to every front.


Bike: 2001 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'1"/215lbs
Tires/Size: Metzler M3's; 190/55 and 120/70
Mileage on tires: 4,500-6,000 miles
Type of riding: Mostly canyon, pretty elevated pace, sometimes 2-up, maybe 40% commuting.
Review: They were replacements for the M1's I was running. they're a little more expensive, but the extra mileage was worth it, if they were not quite as confidence inspiring or quite as grippy, especially in the rear, in the cold. The front mileage was the same as the M1's (felt like the compound was the same), so that's expected and it wasn't turn in, it was the rear moved around a little more under hard braking, and on the way out. Still a really good, trustworthy, absolutely neutral tire that wore consistantly throughout their life (because of the rounder profile like the M1's), but just that little bit less sticky than the M1 rear. I did some heavy duty sport-touring with them doing 1,800 miles in a little over 3 days, from hours at a solid 90+ to very tight switchbacks in the summer, and felt utterly at ease with and comfortable with them. Unfortunately, since I lost my record of the last tire change, I can't tell you the mileage I got out of the last set with those 2 tours (2,800 miles total). They do seem to be more comfortable in the summer than the winter, where as the M1's felt less affected by the temps. Haven't done any trackdays on the M3's yet.

FZRguy
Tue Mar 8th, 2011, 07:45 PM
Bike: FZR 600

Tires/Size:
Bridgestone BT014
110/70/17 and 150/60/18

Mileage on tires: Average 8-9000

Type of riding: Everything from track days to sport touring

Review: Well, it's the only good sport tire avail in a 150x18. I've always run them and got no complaints.

mopoet178
Thu Mar 10th, 2011, 11:21 AM
Bike: 1989 FZR 600
tires/size:Bridgestone BT-003R 160/60/17 and 120/70/17
Mileage:~3500mi rear, ~5000mi front
Type of riding:70% track, 30% sport touring
Review: I have never pushed the front into a turn on the track. It has always stuck like glue. The rear slicks up quite a bit on the hotter days but sticks like glue around 60-65 degree track days. The rear lasts about 7 trackdays for me before the sides are bald. The front lasts about twice as long. After the sides of the tires were completely shot, I took a couple 1000mi rides to finish off the center. It is a great mild weather track tire. They were also pretty cheap IIRC.

DevilsTonic
Sun Mar 13th, 2011, 09:23 AM
Bike: 2005 Yamaha R1
tires/size:Michelin Pilot Power 2CT 190/55/17 and 120/70/17
Mileage:~6000 and counting.
Type of riding: 98% Street/Canyon, 2% track day
Review: They keep me upright and have lasted two full seasons and have 2 track days on them. I'll probably order another set when these ones are finished in a month or two.

pannetron
Sun Mar 13th, 2011, 12:14 PM
Bike: 2003 RC51
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT, 120/70x17, 190/50x17
Mileage on tires: ~3000 rear/~6000 front
Type of riding: canyons, spirited
Review: Awesome tires, run 35 PSI F/R *very cold*, at ~3000 miles rear is worn out, at ~6000 miles front has worn into a "V" profile and needs replacing to restore correct profile.

Ricky
Mon Mar 14th, 2011, 08:44 AM
Bike: '08 CBR600RR
Tires/Size: Metzeler Sportec M3 120/70R17 & 180/55R17
Mileage on tires: Front: 6k, Rear: 2500
Type of riding: Mostly commuting, a bit of canyons
Review: FAR better than the POS Dunlop OEM tires that came on the bike. Good mileage out of them too. About 5500 on the rear, and a bit more than that up front. I wish they had a bit harder compound in the center for a bit more mileage, but whatever...

Jason ON
Sun Mar 20th, 2011, 10:30 PM
Bike: Sv1000s
Tires/Size: Pirelli Strada 120/70 17, 180/55 17
Mileage on tires: 15,000 front, 10,000 rear (had a nail in the rear so newer tire than the front)
Type of riding: commute, tour, canyon
Review: Loved them! Road to Mexico and St. Louis on them as well as thousands of Colorado miles. Great side-grip, long distance, quick drop-in into the turns. Nothing bad to say about these tires.

BC14
Wed Mar 23rd, 2011, 01:22 PM
Bike: '08 Kawi Concours14
Tires/Size: Continental Contimotion 120/70R17 & 190/50R17
Mileage on tires: Front: 5k, Rear: 5k
Type of riding: Canyons, Distance
Review: I'm not easy on tires, and these held up reasonably well considering their cost (cheap). Never ran into issues with traction, and they did well in the rain. Replaced the factory BT021's with them, as the Bridgestones just simply sucked on that bike. Have Pirelli Angel ST's on now; will update when replacing.

chubster2003
Fri Apr 22nd, 2011, 11:44 AM
Bike: 97 CBR 600F3
Tires/Size: Dunlop Qualifier 120/60 160/60
Mileage on tires: ~3000
Type of riding: Commuting, Some canyon
Review: Ok tire, just couldnt believe it wore out so fast for almost $200


Bike: 97 CBR 600F3
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 120/70
Mileage on tires: ~5000
Type of riding: Commuting, Some canyon
Review: Couldnt believe the mileage difference between this tire and the dunlop. Tire did better in rain and just felt better, like i had more control


Bike: 06 CBR 600RR
Tires/Size: Dunlop Roadsmart 120/70 180/55
Mileage on tires: ~10000
Type of riding: Commuting, and Some canyon
Review: After some research I finally decided on trying these, since they are a dual compound. they felt great, and dont have a single bad thing to say about them. Great traction cold and in rain .Have very even wear patterns. The front wore out just as fast as the rear did. Liked them so much I just put another set on.

fyi Epic Motorsports has the BEST tire prices anywhere... mounted and everything was like $350 for the set of roadsmarts (off bike mounting) everywhere else was like $450

dm_gsxr
Wed Jun 15th, 2011, 10:09 AM
Bike: 2002 Suzuki Hayabusa
Tires/Size: Metzler Roadtec Z6/190/50ZR17
Mileage on tires: 14,000+ miles
Type of riding: Canyons, Sport-Touring, Occasional track usage.
Review: I've tried several different tires and have settled on the Z6's. They hold up well, are grippy enough for my riding style (never had it step out in a corner), and last a long time. I've been able to get to zero chicken strips so it's certainly grippy enough.

The only problem I've found is there aren't any wear bars so the end can sneak up on you if you're not paying attention.

In speaking with Kevin at Epic, I believe the Z6's are being phased out and replaced. I'll have to try the replacements and see how they hold up.

Carl

CYCLE_MONKEY
Fri Jun 17th, 2011, 03:11 PM
In speaking with Kevin at Epic, I believe the Z6's are being phased out and replaced. I'll have to try the replacements and see how they hold up.

Carl
Try the new M5's so I know if I want to change from the M3's I run! :)

Tylar
Fri Jun 17th, 2011, 03:40 PM
Bike: 2008 Yamaha R1
Tires/Size: Pirelli Diablo Corsa, stock sizes
Mileage on tires: 6329, probably get to 7k before I replace them off or roast the rear at a bike night....
Type of riding: 70% highway, 5% town, 25% hard canyon.
Review: I bought the bike in April of 2010 with 800 miles on it, so the first 2 years the tires did nothing. They have manu-dates of 2007. Considering, they've worn well, however they take a bit to warm up and aren't the greatest in the hills. I prefer tires that heat fast and feel a bit more contacted when at full lean and throttle (I prefer slow speed tight switchbacks, I don't really push it on high speed roads). My comparison is 3 sets of 2CT Pilot Powers on a 2000 R1. I won't use them as replacements, but they're wearing well considering how long they sat and how many heat cycles i *think* they've endured.

dm_gsxr
Wed Jun 22nd, 2011, 07:45 AM
Bike: 2002 Suzuki Hayabusa
Tires/Size: Pirelli Angels/190/50ZR17
Mileage on tires: ~6,000 miles
Type of riding: Canyons, Sport-Touring, Occasional track usage.
Review: I wanted to try these because they were dual compound; softer sides, harder center. I put them on before my trip to Oklahoma, California, Oregon, and back.

While early in usage the tires appeared to be fine, after some wear the transition between hard and soft became pronounced to the point that the bike handling changes significantly as I get to the end of the tire. Even a slow speed corner turn has the front end feeling extremely squirrely and in some cases the feeling has been a little scary.

I would not recommend them and will not buy them again. It's bad enough that I'd be very hesitant to purchase dual compound tires in the future without serious thought and lots of long ride reviews.

Carl

Cjake39
Tue Jul 12th, 2011, 10:55 AM
Bike: 03 R6
Tires/Size: Michilen Power pilots 120/60/zr17;180/55/zr17
Mileage on tires:12,000
Type of riding: 3 track days, highway commuting, canyons on the weekends
Review: Great tire overall. I would like to say I probably have about 3-4K miles left on them. The side walls performed well on track and were more sticky than anticipated. Rain riding was also exceptional. The centers wore out faster than the sides (typical), but getting 15K out of a tire set was better than most I hear. The track days helped get full use out of the entire tread as well. I'd buy them again, but may end up going to a harder compound since my track days are more few and far between.

Vellos
Wed Aug 10th, 2011, 03:23 PM
I'm 165lbs geared, never ride two-up.

Bike: 2008 Kawasaki Ninja ZX6R
Tires: Bridgestone Battlax BT-016 (OEM)
Sizes: 120/70 F & 180/55 R
Use: Street/Canyon
Mileage: 8,500
Review: "Brickstones" is what I'd call them. The OEM version of the BT016 is of cheaper quality than the normal BT016. They have terrible feel and don't really heat up. Would not get OEM tires again.

Bike: 2008 Kawasaki Ninja ZX6R
Tires: Michelin Power Pures
Sizes: 120/70 F & 180/55 R
Use: Canyon/Track
Mileage: 6,500 (patched)
Review: Good tires. Takes a little while to heat, but they inspired more corner confidence than my last pair of tires did. Felt neutral in the corners though. A major complaint with the Pures is the vertical center tread lines would "catch" with the vertical lines on concrete highways that would cause a wobble. Wouldn't get again for mostly that reason.

Bike: 2008 Kawasaki Ninja ZX6R
Tires: Dunlop Q2s
Sizes: 120/70 F & 180/55 R
Use: Canyon/Track
Mileage: 3,000 (nail)
Review: Amazing corner confidence! The side profile was nice because I was never riding on the very edge of the tire, even on the track. Would dip into corners and heated up quickly too. Got a nail in the rear which led to short mileage.

Bike: 2008 Kawasaki Ninja ZX6R
Tires: Dunlop Q2s
Sizes: 120/70 F & 180/55 R
Use: Canyon/Track
Mileage: 4,000
Review: Same as before, amazing tire. Didn't last very long as expected, but when tread was low I got another flat so it would have needed to go anyway. Getting my third pair today!

BC14
Mon Mar 26th, 2012, 12:52 PM
Bike: '08 Kawi Concours14
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Road 3 120/70R17 & 190/50R17
Mileage on tires: Front: 8k, Rear: 6.5k
Type of riding: Canyons, Distance
Review: These are the best tires so far on this bike. By far the longest lasting, and extremely good in the rain. Overall, they handled better than the Pirelli Angels, which I thought pushed the front wide in hard cornering. Linear wear.

Matrix
Wed Apr 11th, 2012, 08:45 AM
Bike: '11 BMW S1000RR
Tires/Size: Q2 (120)/(190/55)
Mileage on tires: Front: 4k, Rear: 1K
Type of riding: Canyons, Track
Review: This is my second rear Q2. On the first rear I rode only street and I got 2,500 miles. On the second rear, I did 8 sessions (over two days) at HPR and 500 street miles. I have no complaints of this tire for street use only. As others have noted, these tires do not last long when pushed hard.

asp_125
Wed Apr 11th, 2012, 09:23 AM
Bike: '06 Triumph Thruxton 900
Tire/Size: Pirelli Sport Demon bias ply 100F/130R
Mileage on tires: ~400mi
Type of riding: Canyons, around town
Review: Coming off a supersport (GSX-R) to a standard, especially one with spoked wheels I had a tough time finding sticky sport radials. After much reading on forums and talking to tire reps I decided on the Sport Demons. Riders have used them on the track for Ninja 500's and other older bikes, so they may do ok. So far, after just a few rides they seem fine for the street. When pushed however, they feel "dead", unlike radials that let you feel the bumps and grooves in the pavement. Wear has been minimal during scrub-in, they still have the nubs. Turn-in is gradual, less than the instant lean of more sport/track oriented profiles. Overall they are better than the OEM touring tires that came on the Thruxton.

CYCLE_MONKEY
Fri May 25th, 2012, 09:57 AM
Bike: 2001 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'1"/215lbs
Tires/Size: Metzler M1's; 190/55 and 120/70
Mileage on tires: 3,250-4,500 miles
Type of riding: Mostly canyon, pretty elevated pace, sometimes 2-up, maybe 40% commuting.
Review: They were the first replacement I put on after the original Bridgestones wore out. This tire REALLY made me appreciate the bike. I felt VERY comfortable, immediately on these tires. Maybe a little tougher to turn in because of the more rounded profile, but they were extremely trustworthy, and the handling didn't change much even at the end when they were squared off from highway use since they started off more rounder in the first place. Never had a traction problem, only got the rear to slip a little under power in the dry on a few occasions, in very tight turns. Did a couple of trackdays on 2 different sets, and even when they got hot and a little greasy, they got to a certain point and didn't get any greasier, and stayed very predictable the whole time. I felt very comfortable sliding around on them for the first time, like my dirtbike! Loved 'em, but the rear wore out quick and I'd get 2 rears to every front.


Bike: 2001 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'1"/215lbs
Tires/Size: Metzler M3's; 190/55 and 120/70
Mileage on tires: 4,500-6,000 miles
Type of riding: Mostly canyon, pretty elevated pace, sometimes 2-up, maybe 40% commuting.
Review: They were replacements for the M1's I was running. they're a little more expensive, but the extra mileage was worth it, if they were not quite as confidence inspiring or quite as grippy, especially in the rear, in the cold. The front mileage was the same as the M1's (felt like the compound was the same), so that's expected and it wasn't turn in, it was the rear moved around a little more under hard braking, and on the way out. Still a really good, trustworthy, absolutely neutral tire that wore consistantly throughout their life (because of the rounder profile like the M1's), but just that little bit less sticky than the M1 rear. I did some heavy duty sport-touring with them doing 1,800 miles in a little over 3 days, from hours at a solid 90+ to very tight switchbacks in the summer, and felt utterly at ease with and comfortable with them. Unfortunately, since I lost my record of the last tire change, I can't tell you the mileage I got out of the last set with those 2 tours (2,800 miles total). They do seem to be more comfortable in the summer than the winter, where as the M1's felt less affected by the temps. Haven't done any trackdays on the M3's yet.
Bike: 2001 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'1"/215lbs-230+lbs w/leathers etc.
Tires/Size: Metzler M5's; 190/55 and 120/70
Mileage on tires: 3,810 miles
Type of riding: Mostly canyon, pretty elevated pace, 50% long high-speed trip last summer.
Review: I tried the M5's, and will go back to the M3's. The M5's turned in a little too quickly for me, the almost felt like they were falling into the turn. I liked the feel of the more rounded M3's better overall. I feel more confident in them. Some people will like the "falling in" feeling. At 6'1" and probably 230+lbs geared up, I don't have problems leaning the bike over, and tended to early-apex everything on the M5's, so the rounded profile works better for me. Plus, they are about $70 more expensive per set, and are shot at 3,810 miles, essentially ruining this weekend's planned ride to Durango. The shorter-lived rubber didn't feel any stickier than the M3's to me. The weren't even TO the wear bars on the rear.....except in one little section where I'm thru the top layer of rubber already. Fark!!!! And, since I can't get M3's mounted today, I'll probably have to miss my trip.......:down:

grim
Fri May 25th, 2012, 10:08 AM
Bike: '05 ZX6R
Tires/Size: Bridgestone battlax BTO-16 180/55 rear 120/70 front
Mileage on tires: 6,500
Type of riding: Canyon, daily commuter, 1 track day
Review: I love these tires ive have never had an issue with sticking to the road once they warm up and they handle very well in rain/ice i got more mileage out of my last set but the track day took a lot of mileage off.

MilkMan
Mon Jun 4th, 2012, 07:13 PM
Figured it was time to add my $.02!

Bike: 2007 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'4"/205lbs-215+lbs w/full gear
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT/120-17/190-50-17--F/R
Mileage on tires: ~6,500 miles
Type of riding: More commuting than I would like, Lots of canyon @ a newb to fair pace, Quite a few passes up at Bandimere speedway with burnouts, Rode these all year including all threw winter in all temps from 15*-95*
Review: Extremely happy with the PP2ct's, always provided great feel and grip in almost all conditions. Probably could have stretched the mileage a bit further without the days at the drag strip, but not dissapointed at all with these. I ride my bike pretty much every day that its not snowing or monsoon season, and even in the wet, I was still very confident with the bike. Once these get warm they are STICKY too, far more tire than I could ever use on the street, but again thats where the confidence came into play, and they did that in spades! Would deffinatly recommend these to just about anyone, only downfall really is the mileage, but even with me beating the living hell out of them, I got more mileage than most people have advertised so I'm not complaining at all! Next up is a barely used set of Dunlop Q2's for a smoking deal that I couldn't pass up. Plus this will be a great comparison of a shitty riders opinion of 2 of the top rated street tires out today!:hibye: Will be interesting to see the positives/negatives of each brand and how they feel on the bike given the same rider/suspension settings/etc.
-Mick-

CYCLE_MONKEY
Tue Jun 5th, 2012, 10:24 AM
Figured it was time to add my $.02!

Bike: 2007 Gixxer 1000
Rider size: 6'4"/205lbs-215+lbs w/full gear
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT/120-17/190-50-17--F/R
Mileage on tires: ~6,500 miles
Type of riding: More commuting than I would like, Lots of canyon @ a newb to fair pace, Quite a few passes up at Bandimere speedway with burnouts, Rode these all year including all threw winter in all temps from 15*-95*
Review: Extremely happy with the PP2ct's, always provided great feel and grip in almost all conditions. Probably could have stretched the mileage a bit further without the days at the drag strip, but not dissapointed at all with these. I ride my bike pretty much every day that its not snowing or monsoon season, and even in the wet, I was still very confident with the bike. Once these get warm they are STICKY too, far more tire than I could ever use on the street, but again thats where the confidence came into play, and they did that in spades! Would deffinatly recommend these to just about anyone, only downfall really is the mileage, but even with me beating the living hell out of them, I got more mileage than most people have advertised so I'm not complaining at all! Next up is a barely used set of Dunlop Q2's for a smoking deal that I couldn't pass up. Plus this will be a great comparison of a shitty riders opinion of 2 of the top rated street tires out today!:hibye: Will be interesting to see the positives/negatives of each brand and how they feel on the bike given the same rider/suspension settings/etc.
-Mick-
Wow, totally surprised you got that kind of mileage out of them, especially with burnouts.

MilkMan
Tue Jun 5th, 2012, 11:57 AM
I was very pleasantly surprised myself. I think with a bit more conservative riding, these could have gone to around 8/9k as well. The front still looks good but is just about to the wear bars so it's pretty much time to replace them both. Will also be good to see how they compare to the q2's mileage wise.
-Mick-

Wrider
Tue Jun 5th, 2012, 05:13 PM
Bike: 2005 Kawasaki Z750S
Rider Size: 6'2" 275 lbs + gear
Tires/Size: Michelin Pilot Power 2CT 120/70, 180/55
Mileage on tires: 4500
Type of riding: Mostly commuting, some twisty bits, some fun runs with friends
Review: Unlike Mick, I'm at the wear bar at 4500 on the rear. Front still has plenty of life so I'm putting on another rear until I replace both. I've got a heavy wrist, and it's a new-to-me bike so I've been hard on the throttle testing it out. Good tires for cruising around and I've drug my boots more times than I can count, very confident in the corners. Didn't get to try wet traction until later in their life when even dry is starting to suffer, so can't comment on that. I wouldn't be opposed to trying them again, but I'm thinking Angel STs or PR3s as my next tire.

MilkMan
Wed Jun 20th, 2012, 12:03 PM
Well I'm sad to say my first impressions of the Q2's is really less than stellar. After only putting a few miles on the front tire (did buy these used so not 100% sure what might have happened prior to me getting them), the tire has had a manufacturing failure of some sort. The tire developed a sort of hot spot and for about a 4/5" section it looks as if the rubber compound on the surface of the tire has come apart and caused a strange collapsed area on the tread pattern? I'm not sure if it was a belt that came apart inside the tire or what, but either way I have sourced another new front and will be replacing it. The entire time riding, the front always felt a bit strange on left turns like it was out of balance, so maybe this is what that feeling was. I will try to get a good pic of the damage on the tire and put it up and see what everyone's opinion is on what happened. I've never seen anything like this happen to any car/bike tire before so this is a strange one for sure. Hopefully the new tire does not develop a similar problem...
-Mick-

Liv4Twisties
Tue Jul 10th, 2012, 12:57 PM
Bike: 2003 Yamaha FZ1
Rider size: 5'9" 160lbs
Tires/Size: Bridgestone BTO16. 120/70, 180/55
Mileage on tires: 7500-8k/f, 3-3500/r
Type of riding: 50% commute, 50% hard canyon
Review: I really like the tires. Just wish the rear would last longer. Nice turn in, stable in all conditions. No chicken strips at all and allways had great confidence in them. Warm up quick. Have had the rear start to slip getting on it too hard out of real tight corners but allways predictable and easy to reel in. Have gone thru maybe 6 rears & 3 fronts on this bike.

CYCLE_MONKEY
Fri May 17th, 2013, 03:55 PM
Got 4,824 miles on the last set of Metzler M3's, even after doing an epic 2,300+mile high-speed trip on them last summer. Funny, I only got 3,800+ on the last set. Love 'em. Plenty of traction, very predictable, economical, I'll be mounting the next set soon. Hope they keep making them because I like 'em better than the M5's, they last longer, and they're cheaper. Win-win.

One-ops
Wed Jun 17th, 2015, 10:13 PM
wow I got 2600 on my q2's and they were past the wear bars.

Wrider
Wed Jul 15th, 2015, 10:17 PM
Has anyone tried the Pilot Power 3 and the Pilot Road 3? Considering them for my next tires. I ride pretty aggressively, so grip is important, but a close second is mileage. I liked riding 2CTs, so I'm thinking about going back to those, but everything I've read says the Road and Power 3s both have better grip. Thoughts? Input? Suggestions?

madvlad
Wed Jul 15th, 2015, 11:24 PM
I recommend the Pilot Road 4s. I have about 2k on them right now on the SF and under hard acceleration and also ridden in hard rain without a wiggle, they still look like new.

Colorado S14
Thu Jul 16th, 2015, 08:01 AM
I suggest heavily the Pirelli Angel GTs, got 6200 out of the first set, they stick great and wear well.

mcarthd26
Thu Jul 16th, 2015, 08:50 AM
I was a Michelin guy for a decade, rode every version of the pilot power line. Until I rode the power 3s, absolutely no warning or feeling from them. They grip until they don't, no warning. Had a friend tell me for years to try the Dunlop q2 and never did, when I told him how much I hated the power 3 he told me to try the q3. It's the best road/track day tire I've ever ridden. Motorcycle USA did a 17 tire comparison with former and current racers, it's on YouTube. Great video but I'll summarize, q3 is only behind the Pirelli at half the cost and the power 3s finished behind Shinkos in 9th (can't remember exact position). Same feedback from the testers about how the tires lack feel and predictability.
Try the q3s, might not be great on mileage but they are the (2nd) best for aggressive riding. Cheaper than the Michelin as well. If you are more concerned with mileage then I agree with madvlad, the pilot road 4s (not the 3s if you do rain riding) are probably the best option.

Slo
Thu Jul 16th, 2015, 09:26 AM
Mike @ Riders Discount has Pirelli Diablo Supercorsa SP V2 sets for I believe 279, sold out now for the 190 combos but has a couple of 180 combos....
866-931-6644 x804

One-ops
Mon Aug 3rd, 2015, 01:18 PM
Here we are in August and looks as if I'll about the same for miles if not a lil less out of my rosso2
great tire!! Thinking about the q3 next as there a bit cheaper and I've heard good reviews.

CBR-Cowboy
Thu May 26th, 2016, 02:15 PM
Bike: 2013 CBR100RR
Rider size: 5'11" 240lbs
Tires/Size: Pilot Road 4 or Angel GT 120/70, 190/50
Mileage on tires:
Type of riding: Like Mother Goose I commute whenever there isn't snow on the ground. Hit the canyons at least 3 weekends out of the month (1/4 are 2 up). i like to hit the track here and there. I can put upto 300 miles a day on the weekends.
Review: I bought the PR3's and put them on my bro's 600RR, because mine got stolen between the time I ordered them and the time they came in. but we took his bike straight to IMI after putting them on and it felt natural, better then the stock tires which we had at IMI the week before. I put about 2k miles on his bike and he did another 3k and there is still lots of tread left. so I was thinking of getting the PR4's on my bike. even over the last couple of months when we go riding and we switch bikes, I have more confidence in his tires then the stock 2013's.

Wondering if anyone has tried more tires or has anymore input since last year.