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What's your minimum preferred tire width for gravel riding?

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Cyclocross and Gravelbiking (Recreational) This has to be the most physically intense sport ever invented. It's high speed bicycle racing on a short off road course or riding the off pavement rides on gravel like : "Unbound Gravel". We also have a dedicated Racing forum for the Cyclocross Hard Core Racers.

What's your minimum preferred tire width for gravel riding?

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Old 10-10-20, 04:02 PM
  #51  
DeadGrandpa
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Originally Posted by pbass
Totally sold on my 650B x 47s. Wouldn't mind trying 50s at some point. But I ride more rocky fireroads and singletrack than actual "gravel" which we don't really have here, so that's a factor. I have another bike with 700c x 40s and I do enjoy what seems like a "faster" feel with those on smooth hardpack, and certainly on the road, but in anything rough it's a sketchier ride for sure.
My road/gravel bike is 700x40 also, and it was a little sketchy on certain sections of the Denali Hiway. I probably would have had better results if I had lowered the pressure first, but I know that now. My dedicated gravel/strictly off-road bike is 29x3 and it's totally awesome. Not so much on pavement, though.
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Old 10-11-20, 08:22 PM
  #52  
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Originally Posted by DorkDisk
32 minimum, 38 max frame clearance, 40 ideal round number and good balance.
agree. 40.
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Old 10-11-20, 09:51 PM
  #53  
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Agree with everyone running 40-43 tires. Currently on 43 gravelking SK's, and love the comfy ride when I air them down to 30-32psi on the native-surface roads in Northern CA (read: lumpy/rutted). If I was grinding farm gravel I would still choose 43s for the comfort!
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Old 10-14-20, 12:36 PM
  #54  
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The 700 x 40c WTB Nano tires on my gravel bike are perfect, IMO.
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Old 10-23-20, 06:50 PM
  #55  
ofajen
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I don’t race, so I can choose the luxury of running my vintage MTB with 26x2.2 (559x64) Race King Protection. They are so comfy, enough tread to deal with winter messiness and surprisingly fast. Our gravel roads tend to have fairly big rock and I prefer big tires.

I also ride 700x32 sometimes if I’m just riding roads and crushed stone trails but would prefer a bit wider even for that.

Otto
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Old 10-24-20, 01:17 AM
  #56  
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Originally Posted by pbass
Totally sold on my 650B x 47s. Wouldn't mind trying 50s at some point. But I ride more rocky fireroads and singletrack than actual "gravel" which we don't really have here, so that's a factor. I have another bike with 700c x 40s and I do enjoy what seems like a "faster" feel with those on smooth hardpack, and certainly on the road, but in anything rough it's a sketchier ride for sure.
Conti RaceKing Protection 2.2" if they fit.
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Old 10-24-20, 02:44 PM
  #57  
ofajen
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Originally Posted by tangerineowl
Conti RaceKing Protection 2.2" if they fit.
I ride the 26er version of this all winter long. 👍

Otto
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Old 06-04-21, 06:29 AM
  #58  
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Originally Posted by Helldorado
What pressures do you typically run on your 42 mms?
somewhere between 2 - 2.3
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Old 06-04-21, 11:25 AM
  #59  
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Gravel's such a wide spectrum of surfaces and preferred speeds that people ride at--for me, my gravel bike is more like an all-road bike. I like to ride fast, near road riding speeds. Over the bike's lifespan, it's probably seen 80% pavement and only 20% gravel, and <1% singletrack. Therefore, I run 35mm G-One Allrounds. This works best for me--it allows me to maintain decent road speeds but it's ready when the surface turns to rural dairy farmland gravel roads or rails-to-trails packed limestone. If the trip is going to be <12 mph on more technical terrain, then I have a rigid flatbar 29"+ bike with 3" wide rubber to handle that.
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Old 06-04-21, 01:49 PM
  #60  
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I'm going to work on a proprietary formula (lol) that takes into account % time split between paved, gravel roads, singletrack; 'chunk or condition' rating of each of these surfaces; plus some factor including rider skill, whether coming from a road or mtb background, and desired level of comfort (wuss to crazy). That's version one. Follow-up version will take into account road/trail surfaces in a circumference around where you live/ride.
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Old 06-04-21, 02:08 PM
  #61  
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Originally Posted by Noonievut
I'm going to work on a proprietary formula (lol) that takes into account % time split between paved, gravel roads, singletrack; 'chunk or condition' rating of each of these surfaces; plus some factor including rider skill, whether coming from a road or mtb background, and desired level of comfort (wuss to crazy). That's version one. Follow-up version will take into account road/trail surfaces in a circumference around where you live/ride.
What would the formula output? The ideal tire width?
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Old 06-04-21, 06:35 PM
  #62  
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Re: a formula for tire width I would say the surface quality is #1. They have gravel rating systems out there already, I think there is a 1-4 and a 1-5 system in terms of smooth to chunky/rooty. Google coughed up this 1-5 system for example.

Also speed is an issue.. I like to take gravel at near-road speeds, the thrill is what makes it fun. But some riders don't have that goal.

And, including the other elements you mention would be helpful.

I am personally only on grade 1/2 gravel on that system I linked, and my current tires are 700x35c on 25mm ID rims with 37.2mm actual width .. they are totally awesome for that level of gravel and my speed/comfort goals.
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Old 06-04-21, 06:46 PM
  #63  
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The width of tyre directly depends on the size of the gravel, rider weight, compaction of the soil, soil type and rider experience. The fast guys at the Hico 150 rode 28s and 32s and averaged +20 mph, 135 gravel/hard-pack and 15 paved, wow. I rode 35s. Interesting discussion.
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Old 06-04-21, 07:05 PM
  #64  
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Originally Posted by N2deep
The fast guys at the Hico 150 rode 28s and 32s and averaged +20 mph, 135 gravel/hard-pack and 15 paved, wow.
Thats interesting to hear, I was trying to guess tire sizes from watching the videos of that race on Youtube (great videos BTW! - search for gravel locos to pull 'em up). Dylan Johnson in his video said he was on 44s, I was personally wondering if he could have topped his #4 finish if he had something a bit smaller.
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Old 06-05-21, 07:25 PM
  #65  
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Originally Posted by scottfsmith
Thats interesting to hear, I was trying to guess tire sizes from watching the videos of that race on Youtube (great videos BTW! - search for gravel locos to pull 'em up). Dylan Johnson in his video said he was on 44s, I was personally wondering if he could have topped his #4 finish if he had something a bit smaller.
Sorry, I didn't intend to mislead anyone, yes there were a lot of riders with fat tires. Personally I think for me 30 or 32s are perfect for dry hard packed roads and 35s to 40s for sandy or muddy surfaces. Look at the videos of the Sulada Roubaix or the Hico 150
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Old 06-05-21, 08:12 PM
  #66  
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Originally Posted by N2deep
The width of tyre directly depends on the size of the gravel, rider weight, compaction of the soil, soil type and rider experience. The fast guys at the Hico 150 rode 28s and 32s and averaged +20 mph, 135 gravel/hard-pack and 15 paved, wow. I rode 35s. Interesting discussion.
I was on 33s at Hico (only the 100km). For most of the gravel riding I do, 33s are fine, though I will probably replace these with 35s when the time comes.
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Old 06-06-21, 10:45 PM
  #67  
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50mm min (on 650b). Sometimes I get caught up in some singletrack or other rough stuff.
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Old 06-08-21, 09:33 AM
  #68  
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Originally Posted by dgodave
50mm min (on 650b). Sometimes I get caught up in some singletrack or other rough stuff.

I enjoy having 47s on my 650b for this exact reason, so this would be my minimum. I have a set of 650x48s when it's time to switch out. For 700c I would like to stay above 42s.
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