Trailer tire selection - psi, wear, toughness?
#26
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Pictures or it didn’t happen.
#27
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to pull this off, you're going to need to over-engineer your trailer for local deliveries such that it's too heavy for cycle touring. it's one thing to pull a couple hundred pounds a few miles on flat city streets, quite another to lug half that up a hill on a rough surface.
why not build two trailers. trying to get one trailer to do everything involves achieving contradictory goals. you'll wind up with the F-35 of bike trailers - great for padding the pockets of the machine shop owner, but useless in real world situations.
why not build two trailers. trying to get one trailer to do everything involves achieving contradictory goals. you'll wind up with the F-35 of bike trailers - great for padding the pockets of the machine shop owner, but useless in real world situations.
https://www.bikeforums.net/utility-c...h-frame-2.html
Post #26 was the most I have hauled on it to date, that was about the 300lb mark I'm guessing.
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I agree with Saddlesores, you want two trailers, but I expect you have your reasons to stay with one.
If your tires do not track perfectly straight, that will increase rolling resistance and wear, be careful on alignment and good luck.
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...
Perhaps a bit outside our purview here, although Adventure Cyclist did a feature on a rider using a cargo bike on a cycletour.
https://www.adventurecycling.org/blo...-in-wisconsin/
....
Perhaps a bit outside our purview here, although Adventure Cyclist did a feature on a rider using a cargo bike on a cycletour.
https://www.adventurecycling.org/blo...-in-wisconsin/
....
#31
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I dug a bit and found a review of one (family tandem, not the two's day) and it came with 20x1.5 Kenda Kwest tires on it. The review is dated Nov of '20, so a few years ago. I dug a little and it doesn't look like these are made anymore (the Kenda bike tire page doesn't have them listed). However, some vendors may still have them in stock. I haven't found many specs on them.
For what it is worth - both our Dahons are 20" and have that same size tire - 20x1.5. I don't think they are Kenda's. However, those are light weight and light capacity bikes. I just find it odd a tandem rated to 400lbs (which the Bike Friday's are) would use that size. Considering the quality of Bike Friday, I can't imagine them offering a bike with sub-par tires, even a low end/entry level option tire for them.
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#33
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Just a quick follow up. I went with the We The People tires - 20 x 2.4. I am working on the axle frame section this week. As of right now I don't have a way to get them mounted - the hubs are conventional hubs that are supported on both sides, the current wheels on the trailer are stub axles - not interchangeable.
As of what I have at the moment - I like the tires. They are definitely beefy tires. What is a bit odd with these is how high the pressure rating is. You don't usually see wide tires with a high pressure rating. The long and short of that is I have plenty of head room to experiment with the pressure. I am guessing if I am in the 50-80psi range that will probably be enough. Though, the tires are rated all the way to 100. I forget where it was mentioned now - but the thought of what pressure the rim can handle came up somewhere. That is a good question. The rim is made by the same brand as the tire, and is their welded seam version (stronger than sleeved). So I am assuming the rim can handle it. I will ask the question to be sure, though.
As of what I have at the moment - I like the tires. They are definitely beefy tires. What is a bit odd with these is how high the pressure rating is. You don't usually see wide tires with a high pressure rating. The long and short of that is I have plenty of head room to experiment with the pressure. I am guessing if I am in the 50-80psi range that will probably be enough. Though, the tires are rated all the way to 100. I forget where it was mentioned now - but the thought of what pressure the rim can handle came up somewhere. That is a good question. The rim is made by the same brand as the tire, and is their welded seam version (stronger than sleeved). So I am assuming the rim can handle it. I will ask the question to be sure, though.