Another tire thread!? Awesome!!!!!
#102
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#104
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So update...
I got the Marathon HS420's in 37-622 and they measure exactly 37mm when inflated
Though I think I immediately regretted this when I put them on the bike.
They look too thin, and ended up being thinner than the 37's I had on there. With the cheap suspension fork they look comically narrow.
I'm wondering if I should have gone with the 40mm tires, now that we've removed fenders from the equation.
They are slightly heavier, but would they ride better? Be slower? Would I even notice? I am overthinking this?
I got the Marathon HS420's in 37-622 and they measure exactly 37mm when inflated
Though I think I immediately regretted this when I put them on the bike.
They look too thin, and ended up being thinner than the 37's I had on there. With the cheap suspension fork they look comically narrow.
I'm wondering if I should have gone with the 40mm tires, now that we've removed fenders from the equation.
They are slightly heavier, but would they ride better? Be slower? Would I even notice? I am overthinking this?
#105
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so update...
I got the marathon hs420's in 37-622 and they measure exactly 37mm when inflated
though i think i immediately regretted this when i put them on the bike.
They look too thin, and ended up being thinner than the 37's i had on there. With the cheap suspension fork they look comically narrow.
I'm wondering if i should have gone with the 40mm tires, now that we've removed fenders from the equation.
They are slightly heavier, but would they ride better? Be slower? Would i even notice? I am overthinking this?
I got the marathon hs420's in 37-622 and they measure exactly 37mm when inflated
though i think i immediately regretted this when i put them on the bike.
They look too thin, and ended up being thinner than the 37's i had on there. With the cheap suspension fork they look comically narrow.
I'm wondering if i should have gone with the 40mm tires, now that we've removed fenders from the equation.
They are slightly heavier, but would they ride better? Be slower? Would i even notice? I am overthinking this?

#107
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@Skipjacks you are over thinking it. you already have tires use them up and then get another pair later or get the tires and see which you like better.
#108
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I have been known to get into my own head at times.
#109
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I've used 26x1.5" (32mm) treadless Nashbar Slick City tires to roadify a couple mountain bikes, and 'comically narrow' sounds about right. I have described it before as 'like a porn star -- shockingly bald down below'
#110
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It came with 38-622's that are closer to 42mm
I've had Michelin Proteks on it for about 2 years that are 37-622's but measure to 39mm, but are more rounded than the Marathons. The Marathons are more pointy across the tread, like the top curve of an egg vs the bottom curve of a egg if that makes any sense.
So even though they are only 2mm thinner than the Michelin's they look tinier.
I assume the pointer profile means the slick center on the tread will be the highest pressure spot on the ground, which is a good thing. It's probably part of the overall design to give the tire better rolling resistance. It just looked weird on the bike, especially in the suspension fork with arms as wide as the tire and lots of clearance space. hahaha
(And I've been thinking about swapping out the suspension fork with a rigid fork anyway since I only use this bike as a commuter now)
Whatever...they will probably expand out a little bit once I ride them. I didn't get a chance to test ride them today because I couldn't get the kids through breakfast in time to get out the door soon enough. So now I'm sitting here with fresh tires I haven't ridden on overthinking everything.
#111
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My Hardrock has a 23" frame with 26x1.5 tires on it. There's room for fenders with plenty of room to spare.
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After running the 26x1.5 Performance City Slicks for years I got a string of flats that made me reconsider them and switched to the same size with a flat guard. After using them for a while I started to wish I'd put a wider tire on instead of the same size, why didn't I think this through BEFORE I made the switch?
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42-->39-->37, I think you'll get used to it.
#114
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I hate the 42mm's Specialized Trigger Sport tires that came with the bike for riding on pavement.
Hate them.
They sound like a hurricane and have the rolling resistance of dragging a cinder block behind me. (Pretty decent on hard pack gravel and crushed limestone and stuff like that though)
They are a comfortable ride though, absorbing any bumps in the road nicely. Just slowly.
The 39mm Michelin Protek were a great speedy ride. But I wore those down to the liner pretty quick. Like a few hundred miles quick. Nice ride but that wear was ridiculous.
Hate them.
They sound like a hurricane and have the rolling resistance of dragging a cinder block behind me. (Pretty decent on hard pack gravel and crushed limestone and stuff like that though)
They are a comfortable ride though, absorbing any bumps in the road nicely. Just slowly.
The 39mm Michelin Protek were a great speedy ride. But I wore those down to the liner pretty quick. Like a few hundred miles quick. Nice ride but that wear was ridiculous.
#115
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Apparently, the Marathon Plus is not a match for crappy UT roads. 3rd commute into work and I get a flat.
To be fair, I'm dodging debris all the way to work, every day. The next city over (Layton) does a pretty good job keeping their roads clean, but I bike through Clearfield and Syracuse, and it looks like a frat party just let out pretty much the entire way with broken bottles, and (probably the worse culprit) shreds of random car tires.
Nice thing about a velomobile is that I don't actually have to remove the wheel to change the tire/tube.
To be fair, I'm dodging debris all the way to work, every day. The next city over (Layton) does a pretty good job keeping their roads clean, but I bike through Clearfield and Syracuse, and it looks like a frat party just let out pretty much the entire way with broken bottles, and (probably the worse culprit) shreds of random car tires.
Nice thing about a velomobile is that I don't actually have to remove the wheel to change the tire/tube.
