I had ask this question before, the answer I got from Matt at Tyga on the front tire was he had tried a 120 and ran slower lap times. But yes they will fit. _________________
The rims will take the 120 / 160 combo, which is good as the 400's all use those, but it will tend to slow things down a bit, and rear clearance is pretty tight.
At least you can get hold of racing wets though. _________________ MC21SP Plaything
BMW F800GS Bumblebee
Triumph 9551 Daytona Big boys toy
FJ1100 Sporting relic
GTS1000 oddball
senza wrote:i had a 120 on the front and it really stunk, ruined the handling that NSR's are all about.
Really?!
Well, my current front is a 110 and does not need replacing just yet, but the back looks quite 'used' so I'm going to replce that no matter, so I think I'll try a 160 in there.
I have put a 120 on my mc-18 I think it screws up the profile of the tire. The NSR wheel is not wide enough for the 120. I went back to 110. You should be able to find good tires in a 110 front and 150 rear. I have the Michelin pilot power race h2 on my mc-18 I used it at a trackday great tires. I think Michelin has up graded this tire to the new dual compound tires. If you want slicks you need to contact a race tire distrbuter as most shops can't sell slick (in the States) They can also recomend tires that will fit you rim width.
On my mc-21 that I have not taken to the track yet it will be running a 120 front 160 rear. But it has a CBR600 front wheel which is wider than the stock NSR wheel. I Guess i should take both bikes a see what the diffrence is
Hope this helps
Steve
Dave Ett wrote:The rims will take the 120 / 160 combo, which is good as the 400's all use those, .
not me i run a 150 on the back of my CBR NC29
like mr Honda said to, after all i think he probably spent a bit of cash working out what tyre size was best _________________ MC21SP - Roth-tax
CBR400 - track
MC21R - sold
MC21SP - sold
A bigger tyre squeezed on to the NSR rims can actually have a smaller "footprint", and consequently less grip, than the correct size tyre.
Stock fitment is 110/70x17 and 150/60x17, and I wouldn't personally ever change that, it simply works too well.
The exception to the rule is if you fit slicks. Apparently there isn't an equivellant size to the 110/150 in a slick, they are slighly wider, but if you are at the level where you are allowed to use/can exploit the use of slicks, then you'll probably be racing an RS anyway!
I'm Kent Brockman... _________________ Andy.
NSR-WORLD.COM
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