Resistance × psi ÷ steel
#26
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: San Diego, California
Posts: 3,970
Bikes: Velo Orange Piolet
Mentioned: 28 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2165 Post(s)
Liked 1,875 Times
in
907 Posts
Josh Poertner is one of the pioneers of tire pressure optimization - he's made a very good case for lower-than-traditional tire pressures. You can search for his name and read all about it.
https://trstriathlon.com/talking-tir...shua-poertner/
Last edited by tyrion; 04-04-22 at 03:08 PM.
Likes For tyrion:
#27
Strong Walker
As is the idea that a carbon frame automatically has a higher stiffness as a lugged steel one - that is subject to the way the carbon frame is designed- and if it has, that would have any noticeable effect on how the bike rides in terms of vertical compliance. Under the load of an 80kg rider and hit with an ordinary road bump, a lugged steel.frame will give between 0.1 and 0.2mm. At the same time, the handlebars will give 10x that, the saddle 20x that, as does the fork. the tires too. the frames stiffness is just lost in the noise.
Last edited by martl; 04-04-22 at 04:42 PM.
Likes For martl:
#28
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 2,336
Mentioned: 35 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 767 Post(s)
Liked 1,880 Times
in
885 Posts
Check these dudes out.
Wide makes it glide.
Fat is where it's at.
Thick is quick.
Ironman on a Fatbike
Fat Bike Road Rig
Personally, I'm more of a skinny tire guy. For now.
Wide makes it glide.
Fat is where it's at.
Thick is quick.
Ironman on a Fatbike
Fat Bike Road Rig
Personally, I'm more of a skinny tire guy. For now.
Last edited by BFisher; 04-04-22 at 06:02 PM.
#29
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,018
Bikes: Gunnar, Shogun, Concorde, F Moser, Pete Tansley, Rocky Mtn, Diamant, Krapf, Marin, Avanti, Winora, Emmelle, Ken Evans
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 263 Post(s)
Liked 353 Times
in
198 Posts
the recent switch to 'wider' tyres on road bikes is semantics
I went from '25mm' gp4k to '28mm' gp5k and both measure 27mm on 19mm rims. Nothing changed.
I went from '25mm' gp4k to '28mm' gp5k and both measure 27mm on 19mm rims. Nothing changed.
#30
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Posts: 2,771
Mentioned: 30 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 663 Post(s)
Liked 1,571 Times
in
909 Posts
first off , I ride racing bikes because of my build . I have long legs for my height and the shorter top tube and wheel base is quite comfy on long rides. Most of my ride, say 70% is nice smooth asphalt and 23cm tires are great . The other 30% or so is horrible and even though I only weigh 150lbs at 6’1” , quite scary. The racing bike for me is not for racing but for fit. So those bikes I own that will accommodate 28cm tires have them. My Medici seems like it may but right now it is running 25 RaceLites and is nice but I have to go slower through the rough areas. Seriously some of the roads in my area would “taco” a wheel if I am not careful and there is no other way out of town . In the end it is personal preference and , most importantly, riding conditions.
Last edited by Kabuki12; 04-04-22 at 07:19 PM.
Likes For Kabuki12:
#31
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 158
Bikes: '85 Le tour Luxe, Puch Mixtie, Raleigh Gran Sport, Mystery Machine
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 34 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 12 Times
in
9 Posts
I see in that Continental diagram... the inflation pressure, and contact area, are the same between the two tires, resulting in more deflection for the skinnier tire. Isn't part of the idea of running a wider tire is that you can run lower pressure? And if you run a 23 at 140 psi, its deflection will be less, and its contact patch will be smaller, vs a wider tire at 90 psi, which will have a larger contact patch. So there is a closing of the gap of "deflections", and thus rolling resistance?
Likes For WildRalph:
#32
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 158
Bikes: '85 Le tour Luxe, Puch Mixtie, Raleigh Gran Sport, Mystery Machine
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 34 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 12 Times
in
9 Posts
Same thing SeaNaus was alluding to.
Last edited by WildRalph; 04-04-22 at 08:37 PM.
#33
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: South Shore of Long Island
Posts: 2,324
Bikes: 2010 Carrera Volans, 2015 C-Dale Trail 2sl, 2017 Raleigh Rush Hour, 2017 Blue Proseccio, 1992 Giant Perigee, 80s Gitane Rallye Tandem
Mentioned: 10 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 897 Post(s)
Liked 754 Times
in
556 Posts
I'm also finding this interesting. The Michelin ad suggests just going higher at a certain weight but the mavic CXP pro carbon rims that I'm building up tonight have a maximum inflation rating of 87psi, which will work fine under a 93lb 11yo but I doubt would be faster under my butt. Was surprised when they arrived to discover they have an internal width of 21mm making them quite wide in my view but the sticker on the rim clearly says they're fine for 25c tires. When I started doing mechanic work 25 years ago I first heard the rumblings of the wider is better but would have looked at someone funny if they wanted to put a 25c tire on a 21mm wide rim which was, at the time wide for a mtb. I've got a set of Mavic 217 and velocity aeroheads, both mtb rims from back then and both are marginally narrower than the velocity aileron or the cross rim on my track bike and significantly narrower than the CXP pro. Far cry from the 19c tires I raced on at the time on 13mm internal rims.
#34
Senior Member
It could have come from several places, and I'm not a first hand witness to any of it, how it REALLY started. I can talk about how it first appeared in BQ, which was not an MTB magazine. So I can talk about what BQ said, but not what happened.
Likes For Road Fan:
#35
Banned.
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: PAZ
Posts: 12,394
Mentioned: 255 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2586 Post(s)
Liked 4,794 Times
in
1,702 Posts
I see in that Continental diagram... the inflation pressure, and contact area, are the same between the two tires, resulting in more deflection for the skinnier tire. Isn't part of the idea of running a wider tire is that you can run lower pressure? And if you run a 23 at 140 psi, its deflection will be less, and its contact patch will be smaller, vs a wider tire at 90 psi, which will have a larger contact patch. So there is a closing of the gap of "deflections", and thus rolling resistance?
But...some people would rather stick to their cognitive bias than read - and correctly interpret - the small print

A hard-blown, skinny tire is going to have a smaller contact patch and therefore lower rolling resistance than that of a softer, fatter tire. The argument, however, always seems to come down to what is more comfortable - and that of course varies from individual to individual. As far as rolling resistance goes, however, facts are still facts!
FWIW, I'm firmly in the narrow tire/high pressure camp.
DD
#37
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Posts: 2,771
Mentioned: 30 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 663 Post(s)
Liked 1,571 Times
in
909 Posts
It still gets down to the surface of the roads that you are riding on . Personal preference is , for me and my riding habits , dictated by the roads I frequent. At my shop in Ventura there is only one small(maybe half a block) area that is bad . The rest of my lunch ride out to the harbor and back is nice, smooth asphalt . I frequently ride my Raleigh Comp. GS which has 700 x 23 Kevlar thread tires pumped to 120psi on this ride and I love the feel and agility of the bike with those tires, but I’m only doing a lunch ride of less than ten miles. I have done half day rides of 3-4 hours on that bike and , with those tires and inevitably bad roads, I feel fatigue.
Likes For Kabuki12:
#38
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2021
Posts: 3,710
Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2160 Post(s)
Liked 1,853 Times
in
1,171 Posts
Tom Anhalt and Josh Posner were the first to publish testing results or summaries of testing results showing the advantages of lower pressure tires on rough roads. Michelin was the first company to commercialize such a product.....in the 1890's
Who woulda thunk tire casings could return more energy than my fat ass on 20 mm tubulars at 170 psi.
The very fastest tires in the 80/90's from my experience were the supple and wide Avocet tires (without the kevlar). They were made by Panaracer. The casings looked like the Compass ones but the treads were slick. I used to get snickered at riding them (32 mm rear and 28 mm front) in criteriums until I took most the Primes.
Most riders on most roads should be on wide tires but at speed, the aerodynamics take over and narrow is faster.
Who woulda thunk tire casings could return more energy than my fat ass on 20 mm tubulars at 170 psi.
The very fastest tires in the 80/90's from my experience were the supple and wide Avocet tires (without the kevlar). They were made by Panaracer. The casings looked like the Compass ones but the treads were slick. I used to get snickered at riding them (32 mm rear and 28 mm front) in criteriums until I took most the Primes.
Most riders on most roads should be on wide tires but at speed, the aerodynamics take over and narrow is faster.
#39
Senior Member
I'm going to say it. You're not going to like it. Nonetheless, in my experience, that marketing material "stuff" posted by Verktyg is all a bunch of quasi-scientific BS. I will explain why I say that.
First graphic shows same pressure in the narrow and wide tires - it isn't done that way. That's not the point, no one is making or suggesting that. The issue is a narrow, high pressure tire versus a wide low pressure tire.
When I pump my wide tires (Schwalbe Kojak) to higher pressures they are ridiculously bouncy and very uncomfortable. This totally negates why I have wide tires on that bike.
I rode my road bike for two years in goat head country and not once, not even once, did I get a goat head flat. May be this is because I rode my rode bike on the roads. Those who off-road said Stan's was essential because nothing would stop goat heads. If you did not want flats, you had to have a sealant.
If I ride at the Michelin recommended pressures, I would not get through a single ride without a flat. For me, 87 psi is tantamount to a flat, certainly an impending flat, either from glass or a pinch flat.
Every time I go low, I get a flat. I've tried it from laziness. I've also experimented with it after reading articles/info like the above.
I ride narrow tires at high pressure. Front: 25 mm at 100 psi. Rear: 28 mm at 110 psi. Are there any wide tires that hold 110-120 psi? My Kojaks go pretty high but not 110 psi.
I am a big guy but am not fat. I am way off the Michelin chart for rider weight, not even close. Maybe it works for you guys, if you are smaller (most are smaller than me) but I can tell you with certainty, it does not work at all for me.
First graphic shows same pressure in the narrow and wide tires - it isn't done that way. That's not the point, no one is making or suggesting that. The issue is a narrow, high pressure tire versus a wide low pressure tire.
When I pump my wide tires (Schwalbe Kojak) to higher pressures they are ridiculously bouncy and very uncomfortable. This totally negates why I have wide tires on that bike.
I rode my road bike for two years in goat head country and not once, not even once, did I get a goat head flat. May be this is because I rode my rode bike on the roads. Those who off-road said Stan's was essential because nothing would stop goat heads. If you did not want flats, you had to have a sealant.
If I ride at the Michelin recommended pressures, I would not get through a single ride without a flat. For me, 87 psi is tantamount to a flat, certainly an impending flat, either from glass or a pinch flat.
Every time I go low, I get a flat. I've tried it from laziness. I've also experimented with it after reading articles/info like the above.
I ride narrow tires at high pressure. Front: 25 mm at 100 psi. Rear: 28 mm at 110 psi. Are there any wide tires that hold 110-120 psi? My Kojaks go pretty high but not 110 psi.
I am a big guy but am not fat. I am way off the Michelin chart for rider weight, not even close. Maybe it works for you guys, if you are smaller (most are smaller than me) but I can tell you with certainty, it does not work at all for me.
Last edited by Bad Lag; 04-05-22 at 10:08 AM.
Likes For Bad Lag:
#40
Senior Member
What the heck is "Gravitational Resistance"? It is just friction and wind resistance. That you need to use the brakes and that increased speed down hill means higher wind resistance,... how is that a differentiator? It's friction, book it as such or normalize it out of the study.
IMO, this is the "weight weenie" for the new millenium - much ado about nothing.
IMO, this is the "weight weenie" for the new millenium - much ado about nothing.
Last edited by Bad Lag; 04-05-22 at 10:03 AM.
#41
Banned.
Join Date: Jan 2022
Posts: 1,070
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 359 Post(s)
Liked 572 Times
in
331 Posts
How about your motorcycle?
Merely curious, as that arena, tire-wise, has undergone many, many changes in tire approach.
Of note, though, is that suspensions and motorcycle weight have also changed just as much.
Road bikes, not so much. I pretty much forget about tire width and psi after about 200 yards.
Unless I have a flat.
Merely curious, as that arena, tire-wise, has undergone many, many changes in tire approach.
Of note, though, is that suspensions and motorcycle weight have also changed just as much.
Road bikes, not so much. I pretty much forget about tire width and psi after about 200 yards.
Unless I have a flat.
#42
Banned.
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: PAZ
Posts: 12,394
Mentioned: 255 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2586 Post(s)
Liked 4,794 Times
in
1,702 Posts
#43
Banned.
Join Date: Jan 2022
Posts: 1,070
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 359 Post(s)
Liked 572 Times
in
331 Posts
Only reason I asked is the explanation Continental's rep gave me at NAHBS, that they were developing F1 M/C tires and realized lower rolling resistance with wider tires, and they utilized this approach to bicycle tires.
My reality is that if I convince myself something is better, and it's even close, it's better.
Once again, I think a bell curve applies. Too thin and too much psi, I don't like, same as too wide and too little psi. My riding tastes only require the narrower band from about 22mm to 28mm, and I use about the same psi in all. All that is subject to one caveat: whatever's on sale.
As I start in on gravel, I've been told that my 650B's will need much less air, but I'm starting at 100psi and working my way down.
Likes For Seanaus:
#45
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Posts: 2,771
Mentioned: 30 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 663 Post(s)
Liked 1,571 Times
in
909 Posts
I am enjoying this thread as it affects everyone who rides . Interesting to hear the different types of riders and their experience. I think whether narrow with high pressure or wider and lower pressure , good points have been made. Some of you have a different take than I do but I can see that your riding style or environment is different as well. I guess that is why there are so many options available to us. My conclusion is that tires are very important to all of us. I once bought a set of lower priced tires , Kenda I think. I lived to regret it soon after I purchased them . I was on a trip up north shortly after buying my Raleigh Comp. and got a blow out on a hot day. The closest bike shop that I could find welcomed me and recommended the 700 x 23 tires I mentioned earlier with the Kevlar. These were younger guys that also knew about C&V bikes ( wow! , Campagnolo!)and they were racers. The tires weren’t super expensive but still more than I was used to paying. They are not my favorite tires for my type of riding , but that bike behaves completely different after they were installed and not in a bad way! When I want to feel the road and the response that bike can deliver , I pump them babies up to 120 psi and head out. I feel like I am younger again …. for a while.
Likes For Kabuki12:
#46
Banned.
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: PAZ
Posts: 12,394
Mentioned: 255 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2586 Post(s)
Liked 4,794 Times
in
1,702 Posts

One other thing I've found: if I get a slow puncture and lose 20psi or more, but then it equalizes enough to get me home, I notice it's more fatiguing to ride because the rolling resistance has increased along with the size of the contact patch. Bummer

DD
Likes For Drillium Dude:
#48
Senior Member
#49
Senior Member
P.S. - Nowhere in my post (or is it a rant?) above do I mention rolling resistance as a criteria for my tires or my pressures or it having anything to do with my riding.
P.P.S. - Verktyg, no offense meant to you, your posts are great!
P.P.S. - Verktyg, no offense meant to you, your posts are great!