I'm running Hurricane wheels, forks, and front brakes on the FT500 (which I am selling:
https://portland.craigslist.org/mlt/mcy/d/portland-1982-honda-ft500-ascot/7119399351.html).
Bought it as a rolling basket. To move it around the shop, and on initial shakedown rides, I ran take-off Dunlop radials from a friend's RC390 KTM. I don't recall the exact sizes but I believe ~100 up front and ~130 in the back.
I ended up swapping the radials for BT45 Bridgestone bias plys because they're 'taller', with a lot more sidewall than the radials. The extra height means a lot more ground clearance. You're already losing at least a half-inch of ground clearance with the smaller-diameter wheels, plus I believe the Hurricane forks are shorter than the stockers, too. I made up for that somewhat by dropping the forks low into the triples and buying slightly longer Hagons. I didn't go so far as to fit rearsets, which would help.
I've run the BT45s on a number of bikes, they're good. They wear well, with good traction. I've done a few 'track days' at a large (~0.6 mile) go-kart track just south of me with the tires; good laptimes, dragging knees and pegs with confidence.
Below are my notes from researching tires back in 2017. Please bear in mind things may have changed since then!
FT/Hurricane: 2.5" front wheel, 3.5" rear wheel
Michelin OKs, for that wheel size: 110/80 bias, 130/80 bias
Bridgestone BT45s, for that wheel size: 100/80 or 110/80 bias, 130/90 or 140/80 bias
Conti Twist SM / Sport SM offers: 100/80 bias, 130/70 bias
Avon OKs, for that wheel size:
-- AM22 race: 110/80 (Medium or Soft) bias
-- AM23 race: 130/80 (rec is 3.0 but OK'd for 3.5) bias
-- Streetrunner: 130/70 bias
-- Roadrider: 100/80 bias, 130/70 bias