Touring with One-By Drivetrain?
#126
Senior Member
I am lucky, my two road bikes press fit BB30 never made creaking noise.
Last edited by str; 01-23-24 at 11:52 AM.
#127
Junior Member
I've had shifter cable issues in the past when I've improperly adjusted the derailleurs and shifters, so a bit too much tension in the system, which over time stresses the cable at the bend point inside the shifter. I perhaps recall you writing that you hated the Hurricanes. I have a pair that were super cheap and ride ok, but I really havent put many miles on them.
Ive been lucky so far in that I havent ridden where goatheads were around, they sound like a real pain in the arse. But hey, tires are tires, a consumable thing, just hope you didnt have the inconvenience of having lots of flats within a short time, that would be frustrating. Touch wood Ive not had that happen (yet)
Ive been lucky so far in that I havent ridden where goatheads were around, they sound like a real pain in the arse. But hey, tires are tires, a consumable thing, just hope you didnt have the inconvenience of having lots of flats within a short time, that would be frustrating. Touch wood Ive not had that happen (yet)
#128
Senior Member
The biggest issue with the Hurricanes were they were too wide and too thin. I ended up getting turned around in the middle of the desert in New Mexico and getting a good 300-400 goatheads in each of my Byways, completely destroying them. A bike shop 50 miles away in Silver Springs hooked me up with the Hurricanes. Hated how they rode, they were 2.1 inches wide and heavy, so I switched back to Byways when I got into Texas, the Byways are definitely the Cadillac of tires. Goatheads were horrific, if you left the pavement, you were getting a flat, so I learned as soon as you leave the pavement to carry the bike. After a couple days I found Slime and that worked quite well. I definitely learned a lot riding in that environment, desert was my favorite, the beauty is absolutely amazing. The picture shows goatheads that came off the bottom of my shoe just walking several feet. They started in New Mexico and went all the way through El Paso, or even a little past.
and yup, being in areas with those really must be why tubeless is popular. All the stuff I read about the Divide Ride is that past a certain point, these become more and more common, and that a tubeless setup is pretty much the only way to go. I was very lucky riding in Mexico etc where I didn't have problems with these, but I too learned to carry my bike in brush and off the road to avoid regular old long and spikey thorns, and or just to really look at the ground when pushing my heavy bike off the side of the road sometimes (trip was nearly always on paved roads)
the 26" hurricanes I got were also 2.1 inches, weigh 620g, dont know what width and size yours were. Yes they are not a particularly fast tire, but I didnt really have anything to compare them to with that bike other than 2in and 1.6in quite light, fast slicks Ive used on that bike a lot.
ps- last summer I put Mezcal 2.1's on that bike for a much more offroad thing, and they rolled pretty good on pavement for a cross country mtb tire, so I'd have to compare them back to back to the Hurricanes to really get a proper feel for the Hurricanes when comparing directly to another 2.1 tire.
Back to what I said before about liking how a given tire rolls and stuff, it sounds like you were really happy with those Byways and liked how they roll. When we ride every day, we certainly become pretty darn atuned to every little advantage/disadvantage we feel in our bikes dont we?
Last edited by djb; 01-23-24 at 08:49 AM.
#129
Junior Member
yup, Im pretty sure we had this conversation a good while back.
and yup, being in areas with those really must be why tubeless is popular. All the stuff I read about the Divide Ride is that past a certain point, these become more and more common, and that a tubeless setup is pretty much the only way to go. I was very lucky riding in Mexico etc where I didn't have problems with these, but I too learned to carry my bike in brush and off the road to avoid regular old long and spikey thorns, and or just to really look at the ground when pushing my heavy bike off the side of the road sometimes (trip was nearly always on paved roads)
the 26" hurricanes I got were also 2.1 inches, weigh 620g, dont know what width and size yours were. Yes they are not a particularly fast tire, but I didnt really have anything to compare them to with that bike other than 2in and 1.6in quite light, fast slicks Ive used on that bike a lot.
ps- last summer I put Mezcal 2.1's on that bike for a much more offroad thing, and they rolled pretty good on pavement for a cross country mtb tire, so I'd have to compare them back to back to the Hurricanes to really get a proper feel for the Hurricanes when comparing directly to another 2.1 tire.
Back to what I said before about liking how a given tire rolls and stuff, it sounds like you were really happy with those Byways and liked how they roll. When we ride every day, we certainly become pretty darn atuned to every little advantage/disadvantage we feel in our bikes dont we?
and yup, being in areas with those really must be why tubeless is popular. All the stuff I read about the Divide Ride is that past a certain point, these become more and more common, and that a tubeless setup is pretty much the only way to go. I was very lucky riding in Mexico etc where I didn't have problems with these, but I too learned to carry my bike in brush and off the road to avoid regular old long and spikey thorns, and or just to really look at the ground when pushing my heavy bike off the side of the road sometimes (trip was nearly always on paved roads)
the 26" hurricanes I got were also 2.1 inches, weigh 620g, dont know what width and size yours were. Yes they are not a particularly fast tire, but I didnt really have anything to compare them to with that bike other than 2in and 1.6in quite light, fast slicks Ive used on that bike a lot.
ps- last summer I put Mezcal 2.1's on that bike for a much more offroad thing, and they rolled pretty good on pavement for a cross country mtb tire, so I'd have to compare them back to back to the Hurricanes to really get a proper feel for the Hurricanes when comparing directly to another 2.1 tire.
Back to what I said before about liking how a given tire rolls and stuff, it sounds like you were really happy with those Byways and liked how they roll. When we ride every day, we certainly become pretty darn atuned to every little advantage/disadvantage we feel in our bikes dont we?
#130
Senior Member
The biggest issue with the Hurricanes were they were too wide and too thin. I ended up getting turned around in the middle of the desert in New Mexico and getting a good 300-400 goatheads in each of my Byways, completely destroying them. A bike shop 50 miles away in Silver Springs hooked me up with the Hurricanes. Hated how they rode, they were 2.1 inches wide and heavy, so I switched back to Byways when I got into Texas, the Byways are definitely the Cadillac of tires. Goatheads were horrific, if you left the pavement, you were getting a flat, so I learned as soon as you leave the pavement to carry the bike. After a couple days I found Slime and that worked quite well. I definitely learned a lot riding in that environment, desert was my favorite, the beauty is absolutely amazing. The picture shows goatheads that came off the bottom of my shoe just walking several feet. They started in New Mexico and went all the way through El Paso, or even a little past.
With tubules we would have laughed about Tribulus terrestris stuff. ))
at first we did not know what was going on. fixed the front tire, after the back tire, after fixing the back wheel the front tire was already flat again ))) little Tribulus terrestris needle had perforated again.
Last edited by str; 01-23-24 at 11:51 AM.
#131
Senior Member
I love Goatheads )) some years ago, I think it was 2016, we had approx 18 flats in two days, Castilla & Leon, yes we counted them, ) no tubless!
With tubules we would have laughed about Tribulus terrestris stuff. ))
at first we did not know what was going on. fixed the front tire, after the back tire, after fixing the back wheel the front tire was already flat again ))) little Tribulus terrestris needle had perforated again.
With tubules we would have laughed about Tribulus terrestris stuff. ))
at first we did not know what was going on. fixed the front tire, after the back tire, after fixing the back wheel the front tire was already flat again ))) little Tribulus terrestris needle had perforated again.