Old 04-07-14 | 04:26 PM
  #5  
FBinNY
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From: New Rochelle, NY

Bikes: too many bikes from 1967 10s (5x2)Frejus to a Sumitomo Ti/Chorus aluminum 10s (10x2), plus one non-susp mtn bike I use as my commuter

Originally Posted by rpenmanparker
In general the same tire will run slightly flatter (lower) on a wider rim. The beads have to reach wider to hook up with the rim. That flattens the tire a little. The side walls shouldn't be much wider except maybe very close to the beads since in your case the tire is still wider than the rim unlike running a 23 mm tire on a 23 mm rim.
Sorry, but you have this backward for the normal tire and rim configuration.

Tires are pinched in forming sort of an Omega shaped profile. Air pressure tends to make the internal chamber round, wxcept where constrained by the rim. Allowing the beads to move apart increases the working circumference by the change in rim width (circumference = flat width of the unrestricted wall of the tire + rim width). A bigger circumference means a bigger diameter, both vertical and horizontal.

This would hold true until the rim was so wide that the tire ws stretched into a low arch, in which your logic would hold. But tires aren't on rims that wide, so it doesn't.
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