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Thread: Rg150 Tyres

  1. #1
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    24th October 2007 - 19:35
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    Rg150 Tyres

    Heres what happened. I was riding along just about to go home. Thought i'd pull over on a side street to check my phone. Checked the phone did a u-turn rode down the street and PWSSGHGG wtf pulled over and there was a 5" screw through my wheel and it had nested it self in my rim aswell.

    Now I need a new rear tyre. I'm after something thats sticks well and doesn't cost too much. Looking through older threads i've come up with some the Pirelli MT75, BT39SS(unsure about the size) and the BT45.

    It currently has a Golden Boy SR716 100/90 on it.
    Last edited by centercore; 20th April 2008 at 18:42. Reason: added info

  2. #2
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    4th May 2006 - 21:21
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    BT39ss - had a pair of 'em on The Frog. Sticky as - never let me down.

    Can't remember the sizes any more though. Mike at Cycletreads will see you right though.
    In space, no one can smell your fart.

  3. #3
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    I'll give him a call tomorrow.

    Heres some pics of the damage.
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  4. #4
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    Uh oh, rim damage, you should take care of that


  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Squiggles View Post
    Uh oh, rim damage, you should take care of that
    Yeah will do.

  6. #6
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    1st June 2006 - 14:12
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    RG 150 size

    According to the manual size for the rear is 110/90 or 120/80
    Sold new they had the 110/90
    I'd recommend 120/80 especially for a heavier rider/two up occasionally
    You can get this size in Bridgestone BT39SS, expensive and will wear out quickly, more ideal is the BT45.

    Many of these bikes are fitted with 100/80's which are too small

    Don't forget a good FRONT tyre might save your life. 90/80 or 80/90 both OK,
    BT39SS

    Always run tubes, these are NOT tubeless rims. They have no "safety" bead.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by oyster View Post
    According to the manual size for the rear is 110/90 or 120/80
    Sold new they had the 110/90
    I'd recommend 120/80 especially for a heavier rider/two up occasionally
    You can get this size in Bridgestone BT39SS, expensive and will wear out quickly, more ideal is the BT45.

    Many of these bikes are fitted with 100/80's which are too small

    Don't forget a good FRONT tyre might save your life. 90/80 or 80/90 both OK,
    BT39SS

    Always run tubes, these are NOT tubeless rims. They have no "safety" bead.

    Well said Oyster, and good on ya for sharing your hard learned info on these bikes! Listen to what the man has said here
    I fear the day technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots! ALBERT EINSTEIN

  8. #8
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    There's stacks of used supersport race fronts in size 120/70. You need to warm them up, but they are dirt cheap and way grippier than anything else you can buy for them.

    Woops, don't know anything about tubed tyres, they may not fit your rim. I should have read more before posting. Worth looking into though.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by vtec View Post
    There's stacks of used supersport race fronts in size 120/70. You need to warm them up, but they are dirt cheap and way grippier than anything else you can buy for them.

    Woops, don't know anything about tubed tyres, they may not fit your rim. I should have read more before posting. Worth looking into though.
    All good mate. I dont think they would fit my bike.

    Quote Originally Posted by Shaun View Post
    Well said Oyster, and good on ya for sharing your hard learned info on these bikes! Listen to what the man has said here
    Yup getting a bt45 fitted on the wheel on Thursday.

  10. #10
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    16th November 2006 - 23:46
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    BT39SS are super sticky,

    Ive got a TT900 on the front and a BT45 on the back, BT45 is still sticky as crap, shouldn't have a problem.

  11. #11
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    1st June 2006 - 14:12
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    Quite right vtec, the 120/70 Sport Prod tyres are superb in the racing situation. They have a long life and consistent predictable performance, whereas the popular 100/80 BT39SS and TT900 can be destroyed in two meetings. Quite dangerous and too small (actually too small to legally get a warrant with)
    I don't have much road knowledge or experience with RG150's but the 120/70 problem is probably only the practical issue of it being hard to bead up and fit the tube etc. Not flash for a "side of the road" repair.
    BT45 110/90 or 120/80 best all round.

  12. #12
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    1st May 2006 - 11:41
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    Yeah my RG's got (from Oyster no less) a BT45R 110 rear and a TT900 GP 90 on the front.

    The TT900's stick pretty well but wear out quick. My front one scalloped to hell (tread on the edges ended up being different heights between bits of tread!, creating a bumpy ride) I think the front forks need a heavier oil in them, they're super soft

    Looked rather disconcerting, but surprisingly still rode ok some how Keep the golden boys away from the bike! My friends FXR150 would compression lock the rear with one of those with a downshift at 20k/hr. Terrible rubber, stuck some decent branded stuff on no worries

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by FruitLooPs View Post
    Yeah my RG's got (from Oyster no less) a BT45R 110 rear and a TT900 GP 90 on the front.

    The TT900's stick pretty well but wear out quick. My front one scalloped to hell (tread on the edges ended up being different heights between bits of tread!, creating a bumpy ride) I think the front forks need a heavier oil in them, they're super soft

    Looked rather disconcerting, but surprisingly still rode ok some how Keep the golden boys away from the bike! My friends FXR150 would compression lock the rear with one of those with a downshift at 20k/hr. Terrible rubber, stuck some decent branded stuff on no worries
    The Golden Boy worked fine for me. But I wasn't exactly pushing it.

  14. #14
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    16th November 2006 - 23:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by FruitLooPs View Post
    Yeah my RG's got (from Oyster no less) a BT45R 110 rear and a TT900 GP 90 on the front.

    The TT900's stick pretty well but wear out quick. My front one scalloped to hell (tread on the edges ended up being different heights between bits of tread!, creating a bumpy ride) I think the front forks need a heavier oil in them, they're super soft

    Looked rather disconcerting, but surprisingly still rode ok some how Keep the golden boys away from the bike! My friends FXR150 would compression lock the rear with one of those with a downshift at 20k/hr. Terrible rubber, stuck some decent branded stuff on no worries
    Sounds like it wasn't the tyre, more the fact you were braking too hard up to the apex?.

    Keep away from conti's on the rg! even tho they are cheap they are pretty crap! (Conti city's or something)

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