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Converting street bike to track bike

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Ray916MN:
You might want to consider getting a track dedicated bike, instead of trying to swap your bike back and forth.

Non current non-competitive small racebikes (eg. FZR600) are available at around the $1K price level. When you add up all the money it will take to protect a streetbike and set it up for track use and then factor in the time and work it takes to swap it back and forth, having an inexpensive track dedicated bike may more sense. Just like it is a good idea to learn to ride on an inexpensive bike that will lose less value if crashed, the same is true of learning to ride on a track.

Of course such an inexpensive track dedicated bike will be crash experienced, which also means when you're learning and exploring the limits around the track, you won't have to worry about trashing your only bike, or figuring out how to "finesse" a claim against your insurance for damage. Forgetting about your physical health, having a cheap track bike limits the amount a crash can cost you to the price of the bike and your gear and even a crashed trackbike will have at the worst some salvage parts value. Of course used parts for an experienced trackbike tend to be inexpensive and  readily available.

Implicit in track riding is having a trailer or knowing people who have space on their trailers and are willing to trailer you. Trailering for track days is a good idea, because it enables you to carry stuff which can really help make a track day more relaxed and fun (eg. pop up, lawn chair, cooler, snacks, lots of water, AC in a car is a revelation after a day of riding on a hot track) and lastly help you avoid being stuck depending on others if you crash hard enough to make it difficult to ride home.

I think there is a Ninja 250 trackbike rental deal that someone in the CMRA is offering too, and this or just borrowing someones track bike maybe another option to get some track time and figure out how far you want to go with track riding and how much you want to spend.

Deplorable, thank you!:
 So Hope ended up running Bridestone S20's.

They made it through a few trackdays and then 17,000 miles of street use. You can guess what was spooned on to replace those....yep another set of S20's, now if she could only get her fork seals to make more than about 10k at a crack.

Low (relative) horsepower and sticky (relative) tires can yield long life, even with a few top speed runs she was so fond to talk about.

Hope2Ride:
How the heck did you come up on this old thread?

Like Lloyd said I went with the Bridgestone S20's and they have worked great for me. I've been down all sorts of good and bad roads (thanks Vince lol) , caught in strong downpours and storms (thanks again Vince lol), and have even made it to the track a couple times and they have lasted quite a while. My top speed runs really aren't that fast either, most I've gotten the speedometer to is 100mph even and that was for a short distance because I use up so much road trying to get there. I wanted to know what the bike could do and now I know. Anyways my one and only complaint about the tires is they slide all over on the tire snakes on the roads so anytime I'm riding corners and run into tire snakes I get a little worried. But then again the only other tires I've had are those that came on the bike so I don't have much to compare to, maybe they are just like any others in that respect idk.

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