Tire Width Myths
#76
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There are many reasons why this 28mm data could be accurate. Tire manufacture is not uniform and there could be some differences in the tires. When you have a system with vibration as a key factor, harmonics also come into play and some things cancel and some things reinforce. So there could also be something going on there.
And, since they were not really after a tire comparison but a rim comparison they could have run the 28s on a different day with different road conditions. Which they should have reported, but their goal was only 17 vs 21 rim comparison which doing the 28s on a different day would not affect. The lack of 28 in the previous sheet makes me wonder in particular on that.
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#78
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We do understand we aren't going to solve this in this thread right?
I'm from the fattie camp, if I go skinny it's always on quality tubulars, good quality tires are more important than how big or how small they are. Spend your money with Jan or FMB or whomever but the tire is not the thing that's slowing you down.
I'm from the fattie camp, if I go skinny it's always on quality tubulars, good quality tires are more important than how big or how small they are. Spend your money with Jan or FMB or whomever but the tire is not the thing that's slowing you down.
Last edited by Germany_chris; 04-13-21 at 12:14 PM.
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#79
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I recommend a bigger tire for comfort. When I replaced the cheap 700x25 tires on my bike with some700x32 Paselas it felt a little bit quicker and a lot smoother. plus the bike felt more stable since it's a cyclocross fram designed around 32-34C tires. Panaracers are moderately priced and the tan sidewalls look bit like tubulars so win all around.
#80
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Depends on how critical your needs are, and different people have different needs. Some people achieve their goals not because of one single thing but because of the accretion of several tiny improvements. Tires were a critical decision for Ronan McLaughlin's recent Everesting record, even with the blow-out. All happy record attempts are alike, each unhappy attempt is unhappy in its own way.
#81
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All these rolling resistance tests are so specific AND varied that their results are questionable in real-world riding applicability.
Has anyone done hard out-of-saddle accelerations on wide tires (>32 mm) at the psi they're intended to be used? They feel like mud. You're pushing 700-800w and still gradually losing positions. Do that 5-7 times in a fast group rides and you're shelled out the back.
Anyone tried to hold a fast corner with wide and soft tires? They feel like they're about to fold, no confidence whatsoever, causing rider to brake check and lose positions.
The only discipline I see all these RR tests can be of use is TT (on a consistent surface) or track. Real world riding, espeically in fast group rides, efficient accelerations, solid cornering, and bike control, will win you a lot more positions than any differences in tire RR will ever do.
Nevertheless...I'm still curious in these RR debates when the pop up every few months and will keep one eye open in case some new relevation comes up
Has anyone done hard out-of-saddle accelerations on wide tires (>32 mm) at the psi they're intended to be used? They feel like mud. You're pushing 700-800w and still gradually losing positions. Do that 5-7 times in a fast group rides and you're shelled out the back.
Anyone tried to hold a fast corner with wide and soft tires? They feel like they're about to fold, no confidence whatsoever, causing rider to brake check and lose positions.
The only discipline I see all these RR tests can be of use is TT (on a consistent surface) or track. Real world riding, espeically in fast group rides, efficient accelerations, solid cornering, and bike control, will win you a lot more positions than any differences in tire RR will ever do.
Nevertheless...I'm still curious in these RR debates when the pop up every few months and will keep one eye open in case some new relevation comes up

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#82
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#83
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Thanks Sy Reene I missed that page somehow.
Here is a graph of their data for 21mm rims that I did which like the earlier graph puts all the tires on one graph:

Indeed the 28mm is odd. The fact that both 17mm and 21mm rims had a similar curve for the 28mm tire tends to make me think this is not just noise in the data. Note that these numbers are different than the previous ones, they are all lower.
.
Here is a graph of their data for 21mm rims that I did which like the earlier graph puts all the tires on one graph:

Indeed the 28mm is odd. The fact that both 17mm and 21mm rims had a similar curve for the 28mm tire tends to make me think this is not just noise in the data. Note that these numbers are different than the previous ones, they are all lower.
.
Last edited by Sy Reene; 04-13-21 at 12:08 PM.
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Would it be possible to summarize how the wheels and tires were chosen?
#86
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That decision was made pretty early and was already set, so I didn't ask why. There're a couple of hundred email messages discussing some hare-brained schemes we had. Fortunately, Ronan ignored the hare-brainiest.
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You can't tease us like that. You've got to tell us some of the hare-brained ideas.
#88
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Just curious. Are there any categories of road riders who need every speed advantage they can possibly get? If so, what size and style of tires are they using?
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This was one of the more serious less hare-brained ideas. A less serious more hare-brained idea was to build a banked ramp like on a velodrome so he could do the turnaround at high speed and slingshot back up the hill. Maybe it would've broken the bike (and him) but the video rights would've made it worth it. There were a couple of other ideas that were medium serious medium hare-brained but I'm holding onto those in case he needs to make another attempt.
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#91
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That doesn't seem very harebrained at all. A cambered bottom would definitely increase the speed that you could take the turnaround at, which would both save time and decrease the braking effort at the bottom of the descent. And it's not like you'd need to raise it to devastatingly high g-forces to see a timing difference. The only obvious "issue" is that you'd clearly be poking the boundaries of Everesting rules.
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All these rolling resistance tests are so specific AND varied that their results are questionable in real-world riding applicability.
Has anyone done hard out-of-saddle accelerations on wide tires (>32 mm) at the psi they're intended to be used? They feel like mud. You're pushing 700-800w and still gradually losing positions. Do that 5-7 times in a fast group rides and you're shelled out the back.
Anyone tried to hold a fast corner with wide and soft tires? They feel like they're about to fold, no confidence whatsoever, causing rider to brake check and lose positions.
The only discipline I see all these RR tests can be of use is TT (on a consistent surface) or track. Real world riding, espeically in fast group rides, efficient accelerations, solid cornering, and bike control, will win you a lot more positions than any differences in tire RR will ever do.
Nevertheless...I'm still curious in these RR debates when the pop up every few months and will keep one eye open in case some new relevation comes up
Has anyone done hard out-of-saddle accelerations on wide tires (>32 mm) at the psi they're intended to be used? They feel like mud. You're pushing 700-800w and still gradually losing positions. Do that 5-7 times in a fast group rides and you're shelled out the back.
Anyone tried to hold a fast corner with wide and soft tires? They feel like they're about to fold, no confidence whatsoever, causing rider to brake check and lose positions.
The only discipline I see all these RR tests can be of use is TT (on a consistent surface) or track. Real world riding, espeically in fast group rides, efficient accelerations, solid cornering, and bike control, will win you a lot more positions than any differences in tire RR will ever do.
Nevertheless...I'm still curious in these RR debates when the pop up every few months and will keep one eye open in case some new relevation comes up

#94
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Here's something I never see mentioned in these skinny vs fat tire threads, the ability to "ride light". I see people on group rides all the time that hit bumps, cracks and rough stuff with their elbows locked, shoulders hunched and butt firmly in the saddle with absolutely no effort to unweight the bike.
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#95
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Funny, I'm no racer, but I prefer the so-called "narrow" tires to the big wide ones due to the reasons you mention: ride and handling. 28s is as wide as I'll go. As far as RR goes, well, that's kind of a fluid subject since there are so many variables, like rider and bike weight, rim width, road surface, average speed, etc. I take the web site as a legit data point, but with a big grain of salt since it only compares a stationary tire on a consistent surface with a consistent weight. Good lab data, but not real life. I've had the pressure discussion quite a few times, and I prefer higher pressures for all the reasons you stated. It just feels better to me.
And then handling of a tire, which IMO is more important than RR. A tire with a great straightline RR may not be great at giving rider feedbacks in high-G corners.
Well, one thing is for sure, choosing a "perfect" tire to match your needs and style of riding should be much more than looking at a tire's RR produced from varied protocols.
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I recommend everyone move to Dubai and ride 23mm tires inflated to their max pressures; the roads are silky-smooth and well maintained. (Just watch out for the camel grates and sand drifts.)
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The good news? Where I'm riding now camel grates aren't an issue, but there is the occasional sand blown across the road. No worries. If the same becomes a huge issue I'll move to a fat bike.
#98
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well, heres a quick update
FWIW with no data other than 3 weekend and some good distance on the Rene Hersh 44s with psi from 35-45, I switched to to 32mm GT5000 TL this past weekend and must say I greatly prefer them. The 44mm supple tires were incredible comfortable, dare I say cozy. But I felt sluggish, especially in turns. On LA streets they were a welcome break from getting rocked around nonstop but the 32mm GT5000 just fly for me(right now playing around 50-60psi but might try lower). They're the perfect middle ground for my road days and climbing and I keep a second wheelset with 40mm super knobbies for my gravel days at 35psi.
there's been so much helpful data and opinion here, but I think like many eluded to it's really so much about personal preference and experience. For now I'm going to stick to these tires cause I freaking LOVE em.
FWIW with no data other than 3 weekend and some good distance on the Rene Hersh 44s with psi from 35-45, I switched to to 32mm GT5000 TL this past weekend and must say I greatly prefer them. The 44mm supple tires were incredible comfortable, dare I say cozy. But I felt sluggish, especially in turns. On LA streets they were a welcome break from getting rocked around nonstop but the 32mm GT5000 just fly for me(right now playing around 50-60psi but might try lower). They're the perfect middle ground for my road days and climbing and I keep a second wheelset with 40mm super knobbies for my gravel days at 35psi.
there's been so much helpful data and opinion here, but I think like many eluded to it's really so much about personal preference and experience. For now I'm going to stick to these tires cause I freaking LOVE em.
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The way I see it, it is a trade of between speed and comfort. With 23c tires, I am fine on asphalt roads unless it happens to be one of those rough ones that have gravel protruding through the asphalt top. On the latter I even removed my phone from the bar holder because I was worried it might get damaged by the severe vibrations. I just avoid riding on such roads but if that limited my rides too much, I'd get 28 tires at lower pressure.
All this move from narrow to wider tires seems to be due to people coming to reality with their context in life. Nobody wants to admit to themselves that they are getting older, start preferring comfort over looks, not caring anymore what everybody thinks, and the test results of wider tires being just as good or even better than the narrow ones, comes as a release from the slavery to narrow tires
That's like the CGN test in YT video on road tests I just remembered watching once, comparing some relatively cheap bike against the top of the line bike and finding not much difference to warrant the $ expenditure if you are not after looks and don't need to cut seconds on your rides.
All this move from narrow to wider tires seems to be due to people coming to reality with their context in life. Nobody wants to admit to themselves that they are getting older, start preferring comfort over looks, not caring anymore what everybody thinks, and the test results of wider tires being just as good or even better than the narrow ones, comes as a release from the slavery to narrow tires

That's like the CGN test in YT video on road tests I just remembered watching once, comparing some relatively cheap bike against the top of the line bike and finding not much difference to warrant the $ expenditure if you are not after looks and don't need to cut seconds on your rides.
Last edited by vane171; 04-26-21 at 09:39 AM.