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$50 a tire for mounting in Vegas? @#$!

Troutluck

TNSTAAFL
Las Vegas dealer wants $50 PER TIRE to mount and balance for my R1100R. This is just insane to me. I found another generic motorcycle tire shop that would mount/spin for $6 each if I bring them the rims. Same price on the tires.

Am I crazy, or is this a total rip-off? I like to buy at the dealer when I can, but there's no way in hell I'd pay this.
 
Try mount one yourself and you will see why. I can not see how at $6.00 a tire even bring in off the bike he is making any money. Is the dealer at $50.00 is this you bring the tire in. The Dealer ship I worked for a few years ago we would do $20.00 a tire brought in and realy did not make anything off that.

Don
 
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One dealer here is $50, the other is $30, both rates on bike. Local non-dealer is $40 a tire.
 
Las Vegas dealer wants $50 PER TIRE to mount and balance for my R1100R. This is just insane to me. I found another generic motorcycle tire shop that would mount/spin for $6 each if I bring them the rims. Same price on the tires.

Am I crazy, or is this a total rip-off? I like to buy at the dealer when I can, but there's no way in hell I'd pay this.

That's cheap here. I now mount them myself for free..
 
Cycyle Gear

I take my rims off and take them into Cycle Gear, they dismount, replace the valve stem, mount and balance for I believe $20 per rim. Wouldn't consider a dealer unless the bike was there for some other reason.

I've also thought about doing them my self. Some initial cost, but savings in the long run.
 
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I use Team Triumph just outside of Janesville, WI.
They charged me $40 for the front and $50 for the rear.
I gave them the bike and two new tires and 2 hours later I had new shoes installed. No fuss / no muss.

The nearest BMW dealer is 80 miles away while Team Triumph is about 5 miles.

Whizzy
 
I had a tube put into my front tire, (86 K75c) and the tube cost 9.95 and the labor was 50 bucks. Seems pretty standard.
 
I mount my own also. All the equipment is paid for in 5 tire changes at local dealer price. Since we have two bikes in the household, didn't take long to justify the equipment cost
 
Same

I was on the road in Vegas 2 weeks ago. Same thing called dealer $50.00 mounting. Called around Cycle Gear tire price was $30.00 cheaper mounting was $20.00. HMM tough decision. Thanks Cycle Gear.
 
I also change my own, My equiptment has already paid for itself. I bought a large floor type bead breaker on e-bay for $80.00, I bought a static wheel balancer for $75.00 also on e-bay. I charge $25.00 to mount and balance if you take the wheel off the bike yourself. if you ride your bike to my place and help remove the wheel. $25.00 if you leave the bike and I do everything myself I charge $30.00. I don't run a business, I'm retired and it gives me something to do.
 
Last set I paid to have done cost me $75 in addition to the cost of the tires for two loose wheels. They scratched the rims up doing it too. :rolleyes

I bought a balancer and a tire changer and can scratch my wheels myself for free now. Not that I do, I'm a bit more careful when I'm swapping tires. I've done three sets now myself, so the equipment is paid for in labour savings in under a year. Not really any more time consuming than delivering the wheels to the shop and picking them up again; just a bit harder work.
 
I have a Yellow 2005 GMC Canyon with 26 K. The check engine light came on. $96.00 for a new gas cap. This week the light comes on again. They tell me the O2 sensor is bad. Can't wait to see what that costs.

OLY20080518008.jpg
 
All the equipment is paid for in 5 tire changes at local dealer price. Since we have two bikes in the household, didn't take long to justify the equipment cost

You don't need a lot of equipment to change your tires. The only "specialty" tool required is a pair of tire irons. I'm using the 6" long, tire irons from my /5 tool kit. (the tire irons in the picture below are not from the /5)

5378.jpg


There are lot's of "shade tree" ideas out there for bead breakers. I used a 2x4 and a block of wood like the guy below.

<a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/rkdalland/FreeAssociation/photo?authkey=RBe_ymaqZaQ#5213620962691041970"><img src="http://lh5.ggpht.com/rkdalland/SFqApIK6yrI/AAAAAAAAAlU/1ry7494nQWY/s400/breaking-bead.jpg" /></a>

The main reason I did not start changing my own tires sooner was the balancing question (how was I going to do it?). Dyna Beads is the solution for me.

It's four hours round trip for me to get a tire change at the dealer. It took an hour to do both tires on my K75RT myself.
 
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Some dealers charge whatever the traffic will bear. When you consider they make a profit on the tire, a $50 labor fee for each tire seems an insult. If you ride enough, the cost of tires and mounting adds up and becomes a real expense. In my case both my wife and I ride -- so everything is doubled.

I decided I would try to dismount/mount my own tires. First I used a homemade rig and tire irons. It worked but wasn't the prettiest process to witness. While I didn't mar the rims, I couldn't say the same for my own limbs.

I bought Marc Parnes balancing kit. It worked like a charm -- much better than what my dealer was accomplishing with their computerize wonder. (Once the dealer added 40 grams of weight after ignoring the balance mark on the casing. When I rebalanced the tire at home it only required 5 grams.)

After a while, I decided to go "up-scale" and purchased a Harbor Freight tire changer (which includes a built-in bead breaker) to which I added the HF motorcycle tire changing adapter. The whole rig was on sale -- less that $80 for both items. I mounted the tire changer rig on a 4' x 4' piece of plywood.

In a effort to better protect my alloy rims, I purchased Mojo Blocks for the HF tire adapter and a Mojo Bar to lever off/on the tires (both items are sold over the internet by the maker).

To make a long story short, now I don't even break a sweat doing tire changes or tire repairs -- I actually look forward to it. Plus, I don't have to schedule an appointment at the dealership or cope with their not so infrequent screw-ups. I buy the tires over the internet from a retailer that has a great selection of tires, at great prices, includes excellent customer service and doesn't charge shipping or sales tax.

When you include travel time to the dealership, I figure I'm saving time, as well as money, and I'm having the satisfaction of doing the job properly.
 
I mount my own also. All the equipment is paid for in 5 tire changes at local dealer price. Since we have two bikes in the household, didn't take long to justify the equipment cost


Right on.

Three of us went in on the top of the line No-Mar setup. Total with freight came out to $325 each. At $100 a set it doesn't take long to start saving. In the last couple of years we have probably changed 25 sets of tires (admittedly we all do 5 or 6 track days a year) . So at dealer prices we've saved over a $1500!
And if ya really want to save...No-mar makes less fancy models at much lower prices.
 
Dealer charges $60 plus balancing per tire if you take the bike in. I bought the MC tire changer setup at HF. Will be money ahead before changing the second tire. I am now ordering tires on-line so I save there also. I will try dyna beads in the nest tire change and see how that works out. Hopefully I'll save money for other farkles or:drink
Gator
 
. I will try dyna beads in the nest tire change and see how that works out.
Gator


Check out the review of Dyna Beads in the Oct '06 issue of Motorcycle Consumer News. Basically their testing concludes that the "beads" are a total waste of time.

For those who aren't familiar with it...Motorcycle Consumer News is a great mag. Since they take NO advertising money their reviews and articles are honest and unbiased. When was the last time you saw one of the major mags say a product was crap?
 
You don't need a lot of equipment to change your tires. The only "specialty" tool required is a pair of tire irons. I'm using the 6" long, tire irons from my /5 tool kit. (the tire irons in the picture below are not from the /5)

5378.jpg


There are lot's of "shade tree" ideas out there for bead breakers. I used a 2x4 and a block of wood like the guy below.

<a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/rkdalland/FreeAssociation/photo?authkey=RBe_ymaqZaQ#5213620962691041970"><img src="http://lh5.ggpht.com/rkdalland/SFqApIK6yrI/AAAAAAAAAlU/1ry7494nQWY/s400/breaking-bead.jpg" /></a>

The main reason I did not start changing my own tires sooner was the balancing question (how was I going to do it?). Dyna Beads is the solution for me.

It's four hours round trip for me to get a tire change at the dealer. It took an hour to do both tires on my K75RT myself.

I've had over a dozen motorcycles over the last 35-40 years and have never paid anyone to change a tire. A large C clamp and a couple of litle blocks of wood are all I have ever used to break down a tire. A couple of tire irons (sometimes from the tool kit) are all I have ever used to change the tires. If you make sure to line up the dot on the tire with the valve stem, you usually don't need to have them balanced. KISS
 
I've had over a dozen motorcycles over the last 35-40 years and have never paid anyone to change a tire. A large C clamp and a couple of litle blocks of wood are all I have ever used to break down a tire. A couple of tire irons (sometimes from the tool kit) are all I have ever used to change the tires. If you make sure to line up the dot on the tire with the valve stem, you usually don't need to have them balanced. KISS

very good point about the RED dot. you'd be supprised how many shops don't line it up, or don't even know what its for.
 
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