Nice looking wheel! It's. Similar to my stock wheel design...I'm reading a lot about tires lately...Shinkos, Metzler's, etc...it's one of the next things on my list. Michelin Commander II is probably my favorite choice for now. Any experience with those? Appears to be a well made bias ply that handles well and lasts a long time, usually 15-20k miles if you don't thrash it... according to all the reviews ...I'm not sure I want to spend 1k+ for a radial setup at this time but I'll definitely keep those nice wheels in mind!If there's a next-time:
https://www.vmaxforum.net/threads/s...screws-ideas-aaaaaaaa-help.50336/#post-504535
I bet you'll like the 147.5 mains. I use the stock pilot jets and can get the air bleed screw set several turns out OK. I assume you've balanced the carbs?
22 mpg is pretty-low, I read many members claiming 40 mpg, but I think I ride harder than them. I usually get ~33 mpg and I see the VBoost w/regularity, and the red oil light winking at me.
The Shinkos aren't a long-lasting tire but they're pretty-sticky and OK on price.
If you plan on keeping the bike, as much as you seem to like it, you should consider a change to radials, which requires at least a modded rear wheel. You can fit a radial on the OEM front, but it's not optimal width of a rim, it should be an inch wider for the stock tire size, but a radial. Where radials really work well on a VMax is at higher speeds and the curves. There is much-more handling precision evident. Don't run two different brand radials! And don't run a radial rear and a bias-ply front!
Pic 1 is a bolt-up 5-1/2" X 18" wheel I can have made. It uses a new rim blank, machined to accept the VMax spline center.
Pic 2 is a 5-1/2" X 17" weld-up, using a used donor rim on a OEM rear splined center section. You can see the difference in width. Fit a radial and it's a much-improved ride, for either.
The 17" is shorter in height, it's like changing the final drive, less top-end. However, how often do you hit the 149 mph claimed for the stock bike? There are more tires available in 17" because that's what sportbikes use.
The 18" is taller than the 17" and therefore you sacrifice less top-end. However there is less of a rubber selection.
From your list of work, it's getting the care it needs to work well.
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