Are Avon RoadRiders about all that works with WM2 wheels

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In my case the frame and wheel alignment are as good as it gets, also the 18" tyre is 6 months old and has 4.5mm of it's original 5mm of tread left so, far from worn out or flatted off. Strangely the rolling diameter of the 110-90-18 is almost the same as the 100-90-19
 
This summer I switched my bike's wheels to cast aluminum wheels. I went from 19" steel rimmed, spoked, wheels on both front and back, to 19" up front and an 18" rear wheel. My bike handles 1000 times better (probably for more than one reason) than it handled with 19" wheels front and back.

This notion that the rim diameter is a critical component in handling seems like nonsense to me because I can still get the 18" tire's diameter to match up to the 19" tire's diameter, by just chosing a rear tire with a different aspect ratio... SO, my geometry would not change regardless of the rim size. The only thing that is changed is where the tire meets the rim... and that doesn't change any geometric proportions... so how does it cause weave??...

I understand steering rake angle and how the rake offset can effect steering. That seems logical, explainable, and based in physics and geometry but the whole notion that the size of the rim has some unexplainable effect on the bike's handling when it doesn't change the bike's alignment or geometry,.. I don't buy into without an explanation.

Hopefully someone will explain the principles of why they think I am wrong, rather than just say, "because it worked on my bike".

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But to answer the original poster's question, the narrower rim will work, but there will be more sidewall flex to the tire and a smaller contact area of the tire on the road than their would be with the manufacturer's recommended rim because the tire's profile shape will be compromised slightly by mounting it on the narrower rim... (The AM26's are a good choice. I run 100/90/19 up front and 110/90/18 in the rear. It was a huge improvement over the TT100's I've always used previously)
 
Fullauto said:
If you want featherlight steering and none of the usual Norton handling quirks, go WM4 2.5 inch x 19 rims. You will be amazed at the difference. Why not fit the rim size that Avon says to use with Roadriders?

Like others, I am considering more choices of tires moving forward, which is the attraction for a 18" rear.

WM3 = 2.15"

Avon specs recommendation for a 90/90-19F is 2.15. Rec for 4.00-18 is 2.5, but min/max is 2.15 - 3.00. So, a WM3 should be fine on the rear according to Avon.
 
o0norton0o said:
This summer I switched my bike's wheels to cast aluminum wheels. I went from 19" steel rimmed, spoked, wheels on both front and back, to 19" up front and an 18" rear wheel. My bike handles 1000 times better (probably for more than one reason) than it handled with 19" wheels front and back.

What width rims did you fit?
 
for reference here are Avon's specs for AM26's...

Are Avon RoadRiders about all that works with WM2 wheels
 
gortnipper said:
o0norton0o said:
This summer I switched my bike's wheels to cast aluminum wheels. I went from 19" steel rimmed, spoked, wheels on both front and back, to 19" up front and an 18" rear wheel. My bike handles 1000 times better (probably for more than one reason) than it handled with 19" wheels front and back.

What width rims did you fit?

WM2 front and WM3 rear.

I had a myrad of issues I was trying to solve by changing to cast wheels. I wanted to lose the heavy steel rims, get a rid of the non-cush drive early commando hub, and get wider rims so the profiles of the new tires would be optimized. (without spending a lot of money on new wide aluminum rims, a madass cush hub too) I ended up finding some used yamaha rims that were WM2 (1,85 x 19) up front, and WM3 (2.15 x 18) rear . I wanted WM3 front and WM4 rear, but coudn't find them in 19 and 18, front and back respectively, so I impatiently went forward with what I could find because I wanted to get those TT100's tires off the bike and I needed to have the wheels before I ordered any tires...

*last month those wider rims came up for sale here but I had already spent the money and adapted the yamaha wheels which work fine,
 
pantah_good said:
Would longer shocks compensate for fitting a 18" rear rim?

Depending on which tires you fit, a lot of the rolling diameters are very close to the same between 18 an 19 inch rears.
 
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