What is 700cc a measurement of in a wheel set?
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What is 700cc a measurement of in a wheel set?
I teach 5th grade math and we did an activity on the circumference of a circle using the front wheel off my Specialized Sectuer as a manipulative. We measured the circumferance of the tire on the wheel and it measured out to be approximately 84 inches which converts to approximately 213.5cm. So, what does the 700cc stand for?
Thanks,
Bert
Thanks,
Bert
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THe wheel size is '700C' not cc... cc is a unit of volume: cubic centimeter. (edit 1) Hopefully you already know that, being a math teacher
700C today refers to a rim with a bead seat diameter (BSD) of 622mm. Many years ago there were 700A, 700B, 700C and 700D wheels. Each had a different size rim and tire set that resulted in a nominal diameter of 700mm. Modern 700C wheels are used with tires from 18mm (super narrow racing tires) to ~75mm wide (wide '29er' mtb tires which also use 700C rims) so there is great variation in the diameter. But the rim size remains the same.
(edit 2) 700A, B, and D are obsolete. GT made a few hybrid/cruiser bikes a while back with 700D wheels, and if you have one of those today and the tires wear out you basically need to buy a new bike. Other wheel sizes that used a similar system are 650B (medium width tires used on old dirt path and 'camping bikes, I think, as well as many modern mtbs) and 650C (small racing wheels used for an aerodynamic advantage in time trials and triathlons)
(edit 3) Read this: https://sheldonbrown.com/tire-sizing.html
700C today refers to a rim with a bead seat diameter (BSD) of 622mm. Many years ago there were 700A, 700B, 700C and 700D wheels. Each had a different size rim and tire set that resulted in a nominal diameter of 700mm. Modern 700C wheels are used with tires from 18mm (super narrow racing tires) to ~75mm wide (wide '29er' mtb tires which also use 700C rims) so there is great variation in the diameter. But the rim size remains the same.
(edit 2) 700A, B, and D are obsolete. GT made a few hybrid/cruiser bikes a while back with 700D wheels, and if you have one of those today and the tires wear out you basically need to buy a new bike. Other wheel sizes that used a similar system are 650B (medium width tires used on old dirt path and 'camping bikes, I think, as well as many modern mtbs) and 650C (small racing wheels used for an aerodynamic advantage in time trials and triathlons)
(edit 3) Read this: https://sheldonbrown.com/tire-sizing.html
Last edited by LarDasse74; 10-30-12 at 01:15 PM.
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700 mm is the (approximate) outer diameter of the rim WITH a tire mounted. The "c" was an old designation for a tire/rim type. There WERE "700a", "700b", etc... but those are long gone.
(It's 700c, not 700cc)
LarDasse beat me to it, and his explanation is much better.
(It's 700c, not 700cc)
LarDasse beat me to it, and his explanation is much better.
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Think of tire "sizes" as labels. It's kind of like clothing sizes. The labeled size is kind of but not really the measured size. Andy.
#5
You gonna eat that?
I teach 5th grade math and we did an activity on the circumference of a circle using the front wheel off my Specialized Sectuer as a manipulative. We measured the circumferance of the tire on the wheel and it measured out to be approximately 84 inches which converts to approximately 213.5cm. So, what does the 700cc stand for?
Thanks,
Bert
Thanks,
Bert
#6
You gonna eat that?
Not quite. 700B is still used on rod-brake roadsters such as Flying Pigeons. They certainly are not common anymore.
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Good thought! By doing this we can see the actual diameter of the OPs wheel is ~680 mm, which, if we assume the tires have a round cross-section with the bottom approxiately at the bead seat, we know the OP has tires that are (680-622)/2 = ~29 mm... Do you, by chance have 700 X 28C tires on your bike, sir????
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700C today refers to a rim with a bead seat diameter (BSD) of 622mm. Many years ago there were 700A, 700B, 700C and 700D wheels. Each had a different size rim and tire set that resulted in a nominal diameter of 700mm. Modern 700C wheels are used with tires from 18mm (super narrow racing tires) to ~75mm wide (wide '29er' mtb tires which also use 700C rims) so there is great variation in the diameter. But the rim size remains the same.
(edit 2) 700A, B, and D are obsolete. GT made a few hybrid/cruiser bikes a while back with 700D wheels, and if you have one of those today and the tires wear out you basically need to buy a new bike. Other wheel sizes that used a similar system are 650B (medium width tires used on old dirt path and 'camping bikes, I think, as well as many modern mtbs) and 650C (small racing wheels used for an aerodynamic advantage in time trials and triathlons)
(edit 3) Read this: https://sheldonbrown.com/tire-sizing.html
(edit 2) 700A, B, and D are obsolete. GT made a few hybrid/cruiser bikes a while back with 700D wheels, and if you have one of those today and the tires wear out you basically need to buy a new bike. Other wheel sizes that used a similar system are 650B (medium width tires used on old dirt path and 'camping bikes, I think, as well as many modern mtbs) and 650C (small racing wheels used for an aerodynamic advantage in time trials and triathlons)
(edit 3) Read this: https://sheldonbrown.com/tire-sizing.html
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Yeah, I didn't mean to typ cc, but was confused if the "c" meant centimeter. So the "c" is a label not a unit of measure?
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I might be wrong from a historical perspective, but I don't think the number 700 has any specific meaning today -700c just identifies a standard.
#16
You gonna eat that?
Using bicycle tires to try to show how things are measured is kind of like wading into the deep end. There is a lot to bicycle tire sizing that is not really obvious.
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Yes, millimeters, the C is just a designator of the rim width, as already pointed out there used to other widths named A, B, and D with A being narrowest and D the widest, C was the most commonly used so they just went with C's as the standard 700 mm rim, discontinuing the others for the most part. They are also called 29 inch rims : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/29er_%28bicycle%29
#18
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cc is a measure of Volume not length. Cubic Centimeters.
[Don't they consider the metric system, subversive, in Texas?]
The numbers that count are a agreement between Tire/tyre and Rim Manufacturers.
They use a tire-bead seat diameter.. for 700C it's 622mm.
so look at tire sidewalls 622-32 is size & width.. Metric .
nearest fractional size 27 x 1.25" is (approximate), a 630-32.. not same..
The ETRO numbers are on the sidewall ..
circumference changes with tire width. of course..
[Don't they consider the metric system, subversive, in Texas?]
The numbers that count are a agreement between Tire/tyre and Rim Manufacturers.
They use a tire-bead seat diameter.. for 700C it's 622mm.
so look at tire sidewalls 622-32 is size & width.. Metric .
nearest fractional size 27 x 1.25" is (approximate), a 630-32.. not same..
The ETRO numbers are on the sidewall ..
circumference changes with tire width. of course..
Last edited by fietsbob; 10-30-12 at 02:49 PM.
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Well, if you mount up some 39mm tires it will mean something.
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Last edited by teachme; 10-30-12 at 08:04 PM.