worried about rear tire - opinions please

How were you planning on making it to school once the snow hit?

If (cost of new tire + install) is less than (cost of taking GO to school x projected number of riding days left in the year), then just buy another tire. If it's not, take the bus. If you can't afford either, sell the bike. You don't even have to ask if riding on that tire is a bad idea. You know it's bad, you're just trying to get people to validate a bad decision.

im moving to toronto in january so it just has to last me as long as possible. ill be within walking distance of my school at that point

i got a 190 because i got a deal on the tires, i was looking into the pilot road 2s at the time but i got both pirelli's installed for less then the cost of one PR2 so i went with it hoping it would last out the season, but they wore down fast
 
I changed a tire for a friend that was to the cords. I was surprised how thin it was. There is not much material keeping that tire from going POP fyi.
 
Dude, get a Pitbull stand and take the tire off your self, Bus it or cab to the shop if you have to. You should never let your tires get to this point. Think about were you want to invest your money when it comes to your ride your tires are hold your life on them.
 
picked these pirelli corsa III tires about 6000km ago and they are already worn down.
I usually don't replace my tires till the cords touch all the way around, but I wouldn't recommend that to anyone else.

What tire pressure do you usually run?

-Jamie M.
 
If you're running tires with no tread left they should be replaced immediately. If you're down to the CORDS well, I really don't know what to say. Obviously good sense has failed and good advice is going to be wasted.

Your tires are your life on a bike. Why in hell would you risk your life to safe a few bucks?
 
Didn't save much money on this tire since the Pilot Road 2 would still have at least another full season left to them eh? In fact it's going to cost you a lot more now, and even more if the tire fails you, totals your bike, possibly hurting you VERY badly and possibly causing you to miss a year of school, lose your job, or kill you.

Is this potential outcome worth a few dollars saved to you? If it is, I wish you luck in making it to your next tire safely.
 
So they can sell another tire before that one you are using is worn out. Cha-ching to the stealer. Cords a no no but running them down further than the bars isn't a problem, just the grip is.
 
Get a new rear tire now... will cost you a lot more if anything happens.

No idea why your tire wore out so quickly. I got over 10K on mine before replacing it. Replaced with Pirelli Angel ST's and already have over 10K and still going strong.
 
So you get to the twisties daily.....where? Deals Gap and Mullholland? Unless you are track riding and knee dragging daily, the tires you bought are a waste of cash. Get some good sport touring tires and double your tire life.

Riding Bridgestone 023 sport touring tires, with nearly 10,000 kms on them, I had no trouble peg dragging at a nice pace in Tennessee a few weeks ago.

See Conti Road Attack
Michelin Pilot Road 2&3
Dunlop Roadsmart
Bridgestone 023
Pirelli Angel ST
Avone STorm 1&2

etc.
 
I got 9000k out of my corsa 3's on my zx10. You've put 6000km on but were the tires used?
 
As stated in one of his response the tires were used (scrubs), purchased from a very attractive looking GTAM member.
 
Lol I saw he got them from a self proclaimed model but wasn't sure if they were new.

Sounds like you got your money out of them.
 
I got 9000k out of my corsa 3's on my zx10.
I got 13,300km's out of my Corsa 3's on my 08 R6, hands down best tire I've ever owned! Hopefully these Corsa Rosso's last about the same!

-Jamie M.
 
well I know it is dangerous and illegal already but I also know of other people who have ridden with tires in way way worse condition then mine and came out unscathed. so basically I would like to kno how long i have on it untill it goes, if i should stay off the highway etc. i dont have the option to tow, or pay some jackass to come to my house and change my tire for a insane fee. im used to paying 30 dollars a rim to change the tire. cant take my rim off and get a ride down to a mechanic either.

and if using a missmatched tire (different brand and tread pattern) on the rear is alright for the remainder of the season because this would be my cheapest option, and seems stupid to get brand new tires with only a few weeks left of the season

I think it is more than a little ironic that you refer to someone with the skills to re and re your rear rim (at the convenience of your own home no less) as a "jackass", yet you are actually posting this thread as a question about a tire that is thinner than you have any idea about. If you got your hands dirty, your knowledge would be compounded...among other benefits, would be knowing for yourself just how thin the tire is now up the middle. I would prefer to ride (limp home at reduced speeds and extremely conservative cornering) a tubeless tire with lots of tread left, but had picked up a nail and had gone flat, than to ride your cord-showing tire that risks ripping and tearing at parts of your bike if it flies apart. It is a violent process if the tire comes apart, and you won't be ready for it..it'll just happen.

And if you did your own work, you would know first-hand how useless this post below is to you as an answer. Probably a testosterone thing..

I usually don't replace my tires till the cords touch all the way around, but I wouldn't recommend that to anyone else.

What tire pressure do you usually run?

-Jamie M.

Well that's good, but from what I have heard you ride quite fast, and in keeping with that then, I find it hard to believe that you would even leave home with a tire that is that close to cords showing. Nevermind even cords showing, if you ride as fast as you claim, then you would know how very slippery a tire gets, once the tread blocks have been thinned down to pre-baldness. And you would also know that this process happens in less than about 50 to 70 km of hard fast riding. I have seen tires go from 1/32" tread to cords showing in less than 40 km after a bit of fast riding. If you are as fast as you claim, you would know this too and further to that, even if you want to risk the inconvenience (or worse) of a failure, why would you leave home with a tire that is so close to cords all the way around when it becomes so slippery you would be sliding all over the place at a pace that is barely above average speed limits. That doesn't sound conducive to the fun type of riding most of your posts proclaim. But..that said, I did enjoy your post about using CPVC as slide mods on your R6. I also admire your wanting to not only do your own work, but using your imagination to experiment and share your idea. I'm trying to be fair here...your giving advice, by pooh-poohing the potential risk of riding a tire with cords showing (even if inadvertently) to anyone reading and mis-interpreting risk, is negligent compared to certain other good posts you have done.

To OP, if you decide to ride that tire to the shop, I would use highways with reduced speeds and I would primarily use your front brake (hopefully you are skilled enough to not over-brake with it?) And it almost should go without saying..but...obviously avoid any aggressive acceleration at all. The trouble is, it might be fine for a 40 km trip to the shop, but we, as internet readers, and you, as someone who is not confident to do his own work or judge a risky condition or not, does not know if there is a sharp cut about to happen from road debris. It can happen only blocks from home. The reduced speeds are a no-brainer, cuz if it does fail, it is worse at speed due to centrifugal forces being greater so the ripping and tearing expand out and are close to grabbing bike parts with the scene.

And lastly, I've never been a fan of scrubs unless they were practically free and the long w/e coming up has a great wx forecast and your tire size is on backorder.
 
I got 13,300km's out of my Corsa 3's on my 08 R6, hands down best tire I've ever owned! Hopefully these Corsa Rosso's last about the same!

-Jamie M.

But you`ve noted that you use your tires way beyond safe wear so I wouldn`t suggest using your mileage as a guide. Sport tires on a SS you shouldn`t expect more than 6 to 10 k and maybe 12 to 15 on a sport touring tire.

I don`t understand why some people buy top sport tires to get the best grip then wear them well past that grip. You`re better to buy cheap hard wearing tires and use them within their wear lifespan. Unless of course all you`re really interested in is showing people at Tim`s that you have cool rubber.

EDIT - to correct atrocious typos from using Blackberry.
 
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There is so much fail in this thread my head hurts. I find it kinda funny that a guy who claims to ride fast rides on his tires until the cords. But its no suprise then that this same person is held together by metal
 
But you`ve.noted that you use your tires way beyond safe wear si I wouldn`r suggest using your mileage as a guide. Sport tires on a SS you shouldn`t expect more than 6 to 10 k and maybe 12 to 15 on sport touring tire.

I don`r understand why some people buy top sport tires to get the best grip then wear them well past that grip.
You`re better to buy cheap hard wearing tires within their wear lifespan. Unless of course all your really interested in is showing people at Tim`a that you have cool rubber.

Stupidity really has no limit. Same reason why people buy 10,000 dollar bikes and buy scrubs for tires...
 
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