WD wrote on 07/12/10 at 18:19:07:The whitewall section is going to have some color break waviness. That's normal, the bead edge doesn't get much attention.
Go out to your bike, kneel at the front tire, close your eyes, and "feel up" the front tire like your prom date. Any high spots, low spots, side to side peaks or edges?. Do the same to the back tire.
Deflate the tires and roll the bead just enough to see if the wire has taken a "set", or kink. No need to pull them for that check, your thumb will move the sidewall in enough. Go all the way around both tires, both sides, using a good light source.
... Bike tires do have a shelf life, just because they are new to you does not mean they are fresh tires...
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I'm betting your Avon has a bad section of body cord or a kinked bead. We sent dozens of Avons back at the last shop I worked for, defective bead wires and or bad carcass lay up. I'll run a Speedmaster, but you couldn't pay me enough to run a Venom.
I have Avon Venom both front and rear, and I ride quite comfortably on tarmac, broken tarmac, cobblestone, broken tarmac, and any other kind of poorly maintained hard surface you can think of.
The tires now have about 11.000 Km on them, that's about 7000 miles.
They offer excellent grip, I can actually steer through throttle going up highway ramps, and in Italy these ramps are both tight and steep (like on multi-story car parks) the only time I feel uncomfortable is in the rain - but then the Venom is a semi-slick...
The day I will have to change my tires, I might well buy a new set of Venoms (because I'll have got used to their response) or go for something more "rainy" and more touristic-oriented
These, for example, are the PIRELLI Mandrake, as I had fitted to my old Moto Guzzi; not as performing as the Avons, perhaps, but they got me through many years of riding safely in the rain...