Home Impressum E-mail

myNETauto | myNETmoto | myNETholiday | myNETticket | myNETsingles
 
Shopping Forum News

APRILIA
BENELLI
BIMOTA
BMW
BUELL
CAGIVA
CPI
DAELIM
DERBI
DUCATI
GILERA
HARLEY
HONDA
HUSQVARNA
HYOSUNG
ITALJET
KAWASAKI
KTM
KYMCO
LAVERDA
MALAGUTI
MBK
MOTO GUZZI
MUZ
MV
PEUGEOT
PIAGGIO
SACHS
SUZUKI
SYM
TRIUMPH
VESPA
VOXAN
YAMAHA

nach Motorrad
 Suchen 
Dieses Reifen Suchfunktion hilft Ihnen dabei, den am besten geeigneten Motorradreifen für Ihr Motorrad zu finden. myNETmoto übernimmt keine Verantwortung für Fehler und Vollständigkeit der Daten !
Zur Gegenprüfung und um Reifenfreigaben runterzuladen besuchen Sie die Webseite des Herstellern.

Sie können uns jedoch helfen die Datenbank aktuell und vollständig zu halten, indem Sie uns per Mail über Fehler oder Versäumnisse informieren. - Vielen Dank !!

Reviews Comments
(1)   (189)   (2)   (1)   (27)   (10)   (3)   (5)   (1)   (12)   (9)   (2)   (4)   (5)   (4)   (1)  

 
MV BRUTALE 910 R 2007-     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
GB, 20.11.2008
MV BRUTALE 910 R  2007- .. I am not satisfied with the Dunlop Qualifier ;(( what about the Qualifier RR ? Has anybody tested this tyres on his 910R ?? and other brands ? Michelin Power 2CT ? Pirelli Rosso ? Bridgestone BT016

APRILIA RSV MILLE R     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
dave g, 02.11.2008
m3 tyres are great. just fitted replacing rennsports which covered 2800 miles on the rear, giving fantastic feel and grip. hope them3 run as well

MOTO GUZZI QUOTA 1100     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
myNETmoto.com, 21.10.2008
MOTO GUZZI QUOTA 1100 all tyres in the recomendet size can be used !

KAWASAKI KMX 200     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
cameron christie, 15.10.2008
KAWASAKI KMX 200 Great selection of tyres fund it impossible until i came across this website

YAMAHA XG 250 TRICKER     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
Herbert H.J. Gloudemans, 02.10.2008
The Yamaha Tricker comes with the Bridgestone TW201 front and the TW202 rear. I am about to replace the rear tyre after close to 8000 km. Use has been 15% off- and 85% on-road. I experienced a great grip on all sorts of paved roads. Cornering is really fantastic. A little less grip on off-road surfaces. This however makes sliding more easy (and fun).
Front tyre still in good shape, should hold (safely) upto twice the lifetime of the rear tyre.

BMW R 1150 GS     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
neil whellens, 29.08.2008
BMW R 1150 GS Michelin Pilot Roads, an excellent sports touring tyre with superb grip in both the wet and dry, rear tyres easily last 6,500 to 7,000 miles and fronts 10,000 plus miles. Theses tyres really suit the handling characteristics of the r1150gs

BMW R 1200 RT     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
Roland Karlsson, 27.08.2008
Quick delivery from myNETmotor.com and the best price allthough shippingcost is added to the price of the tire. Compared with several other retailers but this is the best place to buy tires for your bike.

HONDA SLR 650     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
BOT, 19.08.2008
HONDA SLR 650 My SLR 650 came from it's shop shod in Cougar tyres, a mismatched pair of road and on/off road tryes. They were quite horrible. I still rode around on them for 4,000 miles before getting round to putting on branded tyres. My love of Bridgestone tyres started when I got my first bike with tubeless tyres. You have to accept this review then as being somewhat biased as I have always liked Bridgestone and I am well known for brand loyalty

I'd talked with a few friends about which tyres to fit onto the SLR and of course everyone has thier own opinions. One chap who enjoys much off-roading suggested the Continentals as they have a proper "knobbly" tread pattern and fair well in the mud. Another suggested Avon Gripsters as they gave good grip and good mileage. He strongly warned me off Bridgestone claiming poor grip and heavy wear. I looked around this here net and came to realise that tyre choice among the "quality" manufacturers is based mostly on opinion and brand loyalty rather than cold hard facts. And like all these other reviewers I stuck with what I know, especially as the Bridgestones were well priced.

I do a bit of off-road riding. Not really serious mud-plugging as the SLR is really a road bike with off-road ideas and is too heavy to be pulling out of boggy marshes. I ride those farmtracks and natty little shortcuts that abound my area, occasionally tackling a muddy stream or rocky path. One particular track is made up of broken rocks that jar and bounce the bike. On the cheap nasty tyres I was always pleasantly suprised how well they gripped and smoothed the rubble. When I got the new tyres fitted I excitedly went to this track fully expecting to glide effortlessly across the stones. Hmmm. Though the road riding was without question much more stable and controlled, the off road stones felt like each one was attacking my bike and my spine. These tyres were very very hard. The bike was skittering across the top of the stones and the engine was jumping under power with it. Not happy.

This state of affairs continued and I left the rocky road for more comfortable dirt tracks. I then had a 2-up trip to Wales which warmed the tryes and plenty of normal commuting. I went back to the rocky road about 1,000 miles and 1 month later and behold!, the tyres are superb! I have checked the pressures to see if this caused the difference but they were the same as ever. It seems this tyre (perhaps all tyres) need a little time to soften up.

These are mostly on, semi off road tyres. The pattern is chunky but with large areas of contact for the road. They perform averagely in the wet and well in the dry, but then so do most tyres. It is deepest darkest winter at the time of writing abut I have noticed the tyres don't warm up much in use. I am used to more sporty road tyres though so I guess it's all relative. Hopefully the cool running will help them last longer. As for mileage, only time will tell. I'll add to this page these details when I know them!.

HONDA CBR 1000 RR FIREBLADE 2008 -     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
1000RR, 19.08.2008
HONDA CBR 1000 RR FIREBLADE 2008 - Interestingly the use of Qualifiers marks the first time since the original CBR900RR that Dunlops have been fitted as OEM equipment to a literbike CBR. About half the 1000s imported will be shod with the Dunlops, the other half with Bridgestones. While the rear Qualifier sticks like flypaper to Laguna's pavement even under the brutal acceleration the CBR offers, the front Qualifier-as we've experienced with other OEM variants of the same tire-is a bit numb on front-end feedback at full lean. For the afternoon sessions the bikes were fitted with Dunlop's new D211 GP race tires, which feature the company's N-Tec construction and a dual-compound rear tread. Mounting the huge-diameter rear tires (stock on the CBR is a 190/50; most race tires are 55 series) significantly changes gearing. On the original '04 1000 that definitely hurt performance, and the '06 second-generation 1000 was less, but still noticeably, affected. The new CBR didn't seem to be bothered at all with the swap in rubber, accelerating with the same immediacy in the same gears from each of Laguna's turns.


HONDA CBR 1000 RR FIREBLADE 2006 -     Für weitere Kommentare zu diesem Bike ... hier klicken !
biket, 19.08.2008
HONDA CBR 1000 RR FIREBLADE 2006 - So far I'm very happy with the Michelin Pilot Power tires. They grip well and feel like they allow the bike to achieve a higher lean angle. A new Pilot Power with a dual compound called a "2CT" is available and in the beloved 190/55 size for the rear.