BMX - Talk to me about tire width....

Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.
surfinsmiley
07-31-06, 01:48 AM
So I want to know about tire width.
I see a few fat tires out there now that look interesting and I`m just wondering about what is the advantage/disadvantage of wider tires.
And will I feel a big difference going from a 1.95 to a 2.35?
sprintcarblue
07-31-06, 08:31 AM
the smaller the tires the less rolling resistance and the faster they should roll. anything over 1.95 is really big. You will notice a big difference, I went from a GLH to a Dirthpath on the front of my bike and it felt like a chopper. The only advantage to bigger tires really are if you're either bigger, or you do huge drops and you want more cushion. Otherwise stick with 1.85 or 1.95 if you want a relatively fast rolling, harder tire.
eightdip
07-31-06, 02:58 PM
that answer is completly different to my opinion, i didnt notice much difference going from a 1.95 to a 2.25 and it doesnt seem overly big. anything over 2.2 and you notice a little difference but not too much. i prefer fatter tires myself
Prozakk
07-31-06, 04:35 PM
The major difference is how it changes the steering angle.
CMcMahon
07-31-06, 05:31 PM
And will I feel a big difference going from a 1.95 to a 2.35?
2.25", surely.
Jerry Garcia
07-31-06, 10:31 PM
big front small back, nuff said.
surfinsmiley
08-01-06, 12:33 AM
2.25", surely.
Sorry about that! Yeah 2.25 Maxxis Holly Roller or the IRC equivalent are what I`m seeing around the most.
I live in a metric world so I get confused trying to talk in Inches:o
Prozzak wrote that it changes the steering angle.
Can anyone tell me more about what goes on there?
Will a fatter tire make the turning circle proportionatly bigger? OR perhaps smaller?
FuzzyRyder
08-01-06, 12:46 AM
It dosent even change.
sprintcarblue
08-01-06, 08:47 AM
Actually it does change. By running a 1.85 back and a 2.25 in front you actually change the rake of the headtube because you push up the front of the bike by a quarter inch. This means that tricks like nose wheelies, hang fives, and other nose tricks will be harder. With a 1.95 in back its not QUITE as noticable, but it does make a difference. I can't stand huge tires, but that's probably because I ride my road bike a lot.
Prozakk
08-01-06, 12:59 PM
Actually it does change. By running a 1.85 back and a 2.25 in front you actually change the rake of the headtube because you push up the front of the bike by a quarter inch. This means that tricks like nose wheelies, hang fives, and other nose tricks will be harder. With a 1.95 in back its not QUITE as noticable, but it does make a difference. I can't stand huge tires, but that's probably because I ride my road bike a lot.
Thanks for answering for me. I'm glad someone else here "gets" geometry.
FuzzyRyder
08-01-06, 01:09 PM
I Get that it changes. But if you buy a bike with a big front tire and get used to that right away it dosent even matter.
sprintcarblue
08-01-06, 08:55 PM
that isn't true though, you might not notice but it will effect the bikes geometry and how it handles. you just have to be more paticular about bike feel, i guess.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.12 Copyright © 2013 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.