On the S/SR the stock size is 140/70/17, I found a deal on-line to a tire that was recommended, but it only came in 150/70/17. At a friends recommendation, I tried it and the width looked great and the tire shape was much nicer than other tires I tried at the stock size.
I kept the front tire the same, but I never noticed that the rear tire was slightly larger in diameter.
My front tire tends to wear out a sooner, so it would make sense to try going from the stock 110/70/17 to 120/70/17. Anyone have any issues with that. You get more tire options those larger sizes.
I'd be wary of not only upsetting the geometry of such a slight bike, but destroying the range with 120 front and 150 rear. I'm pretty sure the Zero engineers are half decent and did enough testing to reason the stock sizes. I wonder what sizes they ride on their own SR's.
I'm going with the Michelin Power RS's in stock sizes next.
To clarify, I ran the "wrong size" - by 5 mm on each size -I wonder if anyone can even notice this visually without measuring. FYI, there is a nominal value and a size tolerance and tires in general are notorious for not being nominal size.
I tried the stock Diablo Rosso for the life of the tires and found a weird wear pattern basically on the same windy mountain highway that many Zero employees ride to work. My work at the time was blocks away from Zero's and I would often ride with zero employees to work by happenstance.
I don't know the motivation of selecting the Diablo Rosso and the tire size, but I bet it has to do with cost a lot more than you think. Zero is a lean organization, its trying to make a profit and sales are low. I am not sure if they have time to do real tire testing. Zero employees might be riding Diablo Rosso because that is what they have laying around.
The "right" tires for the motorcycle should be up to the rider needs. I like the idea of a little extra rubber and I have had good tire shape and wear results for the life of basically the same tires (Bridgestone T30 before, now T31). Also, originally I found a deal and since tires are one of the largest cost of motorcycles, tire cost is a big factor. Yes, tire diameter is slightly different.