My 1200GSA came fitted with Michelin Anarkee tyres..
At 12,000 miles and two pairs down I thought I would try Dunlop D607 Trailmax tyres. They had worked well on my old vanilla 1200, including a couple of trackdays.
Big mistake.
Whilst the steering is definitely faster, the GSA is tracking every bump and ripple in the road and shaking its head at around 30 miles an hour, feeling as if the bike wants to crab along. Sometimes it feels as if the front wheel is buckled or running on a cam, with a distinct lurching feeling. White ‘kick-back’ arrows, for instance, promote a real weave, cats eyes see the bike stepping sideways.
I stuck with the 607 tyres over 1500 more miles, tried various pressures and still no change. Had the balance rechecked and that the wheels hadn’t suddenly become untrue, all OK.
Had it been a conventional swing arm bike I would have sworn the wheels were out of line.
The D607 tyres, for whatever reason, do not seem to suite it, so it’s back to Anarkees for me.
At 12,000 miles and two pairs down I thought I would try Dunlop D607 Trailmax tyres. They had worked well on my old vanilla 1200, including a couple of trackdays.
Big mistake.
Whilst the steering is definitely faster, the GSA is tracking every bump and ripple in the road and shaking its head at around 30 miles an hour, feeling as if the bike wants to crab along. Sometimes it feels as if the front wheel is buckled or running on a cam, with a distinct lurching feeling. White ‘kick-back’ arrows, for instance, promote a real weave, cats eyes see the bike stepping sideways.
I stuck with the 607 tyres over 1500 more miles, tried various pressures and still no change. Had the balance rechecked and that the wheels hadn’t suddenly become untrue, all OK.
Had it been a conventional swing arm bike I would have sworn the wheels were out of line.
The D607 tyres, for whatever reason, do not seem to suite it, so it’s back to Anarkees for me.
