[Ducati] Tire Pressures

mo+omille info at motomille.com
Fri Jun 1 12:35:23 EDT 2007


The manufacturers recommended is odd... some on the list can explain  
why they spec these pressures.  Perhaps it's to meet a industry  
standard for a rating... I'm not sure.  I do know there is a happy  
zone for which most tires work the best.

I usually go 32 front and 29 rear.  Give or take 1psi depending on  
the temps.   The 32 your tire guy is giving you seems right to me.   
43 to me sounds a bit scary and unpredictable.

The harder the tire the less flex it will have giving it a  
unpredictable feel.  I think you'll get better mileage on the highway  
with a harder PSI.  But that's about it.

Pete


On Jun 1, 2007, at 5:09 AM, Matt Lane wrote:

> When I replaced the Pilor Power tires on my "Italian Bike" with  
> Conti Sport
> Attacks (which are cheap and I am VERY happy the the handling...TBD on
> longevity) the place which installed them put them at 32psi fr/rr  
> like he
> does with every tire he ever mounts.
>
> I tried that for a couple hundred miles and liked the tires very  
> much. I
> also tried 33psi fr/rr according to the manual on my Pilots BTW.  
> Worked
> fine.
>
> But I also contacted Continental and asked them what pressures they
> recommend for me, my bike, and the new tires. After converting BAR  
> to PSI (
> 14.7 to 1, yes?) I got about 37psi front and 43 rear on the road. Big
> difference but I just tried it for about 50 miles, including some very
> twisty sections. Not at all bad. Good, even. And I "assume" the higher
> pressures will result in greater longevity, among other things.
>
> Any thoughts/comments would be a fine thing.
>
> Ride Well,
>
> Gabriel
>
>
> Tire pressures are tricky. The bike manufacturers and tire  
> manufacturers give different pressures as recomendations. I always  
> go with the bike manufacturers recommendations for street riding. I  
> will adjust the pressure for track days and run less PSI. Less PSI  
> in the tires means more grip on the track. You do not need to worry  
> about that on the street and will only wear the tire out in the  
> middle quicker. I do not know why but Ducati recommends less tire  
> pressure front and rear than the other bikes I own. Most of my  
> japanese bikes recommend 36 PSI front and 38-42 PSI rear. So, I  
> would say to stick with bikes manufacturers suggested pressures. If  
> anything run 2 or 3 PSI less not more.
>
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