Author Topic: Rim size and tire  (Read 1612 times)

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Offline Ernest

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Rim size and tire
« on: November 14, 2005, 06:09:55 PM »
Still brainstorming ideas and just getting info to customize my 1974 cb 750.  The bike came to me thrashed, spray painted tank, looking like crap but still running.  I don't care to restore it to original I would rather customize it.

I'm looking for info/links on what to look into to end up with fat tires like these?

No, Im not looking to put stupid ape hangers on it but I wouldn't mind a rear fender with a seat setup like that.  The rims and tires are what I'm looking for right now.  I imagine I will need new rims and spokes so where do you suppose I should look for these kind of tires and who sells rim and spoke kits (that would fit the tires) where I could lace them to stock cb 750 hubs? 

Offline Bodi

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Re: Rim size and tire
« Reply #1 on: November 14, 2005, 07:04:17 PM »
First you have to find out what width tire will fit in your bike. The swingarm width is a pretty hard limit, the original rear fender (particularly the mounting bolt area) is probably a bit thinner, and the shocks may be the tightest area. Once you hit the chain you're into a lot of tricky work to get a bigger tire on the rear, so that and the swingarm will be the serious limits. The street tracker pictured is running solid rear struts, not unusual on some dirt track bikes but odd for a street tracker so possibly he had to take the shocks off to clear the tire. The front fender and stays cause the most friction when trying to install a large front tire, the front end can get pretty loose once the fork brace action of the front fender bracket is removed though. Getting a fat tire past the disk caliper(s) can be a hassle too.
Once you find the tire width you want, you check out tires and sizes to get approximately the outer diameter you want. Again there are limits to look at, you don't want the front tire to hit the triple tree at full fork compression in particular.
For an example, say you can fit a 180mm tire width and you want a 26" outside diameter. With a 70% aspect ratio tire, this gives you about 5 inches of tire off the rim, so you'll want a 16" rim and a 180/70-16 tire.
Once you find the tire that you like, find the rim width that's recommended for that tire. Then buy the rim and spokes you need and lace it up.
Buchanans has a good selection of steel and alloy rims with the required spoke drilling and can get you the spoke sizes required for non-stock rims.

Offline Ernest

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Re: Rim size and tire
« Reply #2 on: November 14, 2005, 10:18:02 PM »
thanks for the info and specs to keep in mind.  Deciphering tire sizing is something I will need to look more into.  For instance I'm looking at these Coker beck tread design that are sized as 500-16....that seems way off from the 180 mm width you mentioned.  I'm sure that there is something I just don't get yet.

Here are the Coker tires

I'm looking for black wall tires even though these are shown as white wall.

The question is do I get the same size tire for front and back to achieve this look?

I would be cool with removing the shocks and bolting or welding on struts to be able to use wide tires.  It's the look I want.  From experience can anyone tell me whats the widest you can go with stock swingarm and front forks?

Offline dusterdude

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Re: Rim size and tire
« Reply #3 on: November 15, 2005, 08:01:48 AM »
ok kids,from my own experience.i put a 5.10-16(about a 130) on my bike.i had to cut the front inside part of the chainguard out and move the brake anchor rod over about a 1/4 inch.hopes that helps
mark
1972 k1 750
1949 fl panhead
1 1/2 gl1100 goldwings
1998 cbr600 f3