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Yeah, did it myself. Wasn’t too terrible of a job. Breaking the bead, and then getting the bead initially over the rim were the two hardest parts. I used a combination of a vice and large c-clamps to break the bead. Only thing I’d do different next time is to buy better rim protectors. The ones I used tore through and I ended up scratching the rim.
I thought about this, seems to be some mixed opinions about using them online.
Yeah, I packed the dust seal with grease when reinstalling.
Interesting. Based on the amount of force required to pop them apart, I think I’d have ended up with the uppers firing themselves through the wall. Bike is a Honda CB500F. The area where the snap ring and seal sits was corroded and rusty, effectively locking in the seals.

Mounted new tires today

https://lemmy.world/post/6121401

Mounted new tires today - Lemmy.world

Went out for a ride, and of course it started pissing down rain. They Road 5s did feel good in the wet though.

New tire day - so of course it started pissing down rain.

https://lemmy.world/post/6120983

I really do want to balance them, just didn’t have an easy way today. If there was a shop available to mount and balance, I’d absolutely have taken it there. The weights are opposite the valve stem, so I’m hoping that I get lucky, we’ll see.

Yeah, putting on the Road 5s, Revzilla had them for a good bit less than the Road 6.

Haven’t balanced them. They are Michelins, which claim to not need balancing, or at least don’t have a heavy spot. I had planned to rig up a basic rig, I do have a pack of stick on weights, but ran out of time and had to get the bike back together. If I notice any weirdness after doing the rear tomorrow I’ll need to figure something out. There are no shops available locally who can balance them.

I did a thing today! New front tire and fork seals

https://lemmy.world/post/6059802

I did a thing today! New front tire and fork seals - Lemmy.world

Holy fuck, that was rough. The guides and the videos show the uppers and lowers pulling apart easily. I had to clamp the lowers in the vice and use the uppers as a slide hammer and repeat the bang bang bang process for 5-10 minutes, with the seal moving almost imperceptibly as it walked it’s way out. Putting the upper bushing back in took a trick, it is a split ring, and is expanded too big to fit in the recess unless you compress it. I found that I could take some brake bleeding hose and cut off about 4" of it, and hammer it in with a punch between the bushing and the lowers. This worked to compress the bushing, and I could then place the washer over it and hammer it down about halfway, and then pulled the washer and hose out and then drive it home. Tomorrow I get to get back at it and tackle changing the rear tire.

Thanks. Not looking for run-flats, just wondering if there is something less puncture resistant. In the cycling world (the ones with pedals) certain tires are known to be more or less resistant to punctures. Commuting on brand X resulted in multiple punctures each month, while brand Y was puncture free for a year.