Roadie tire sizes...



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A

Alex Ravenel

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Forgive me!

I have an old roadie in the basement I am rebuilding. Needs new tires. It has some pretty nice mavic
rims on it, 27". Will a 700 tire or tube fit this?

Thanks...

--
--------
Alex Ravenel http://www.theravenel.net
 
Alex Ravenel wrote:
>
> Forgive me!
>
> I have an old roadie in the basement I am rebuilding. Needs new tires. It has some pretty nice
> mavic rims on it, 27". Will a 700 tire or tube fit this?

No.

700c's are 29 inch wheels.

Barry
 
B a r r y B u r k e J r . wrote:
> Alex Ravenel wrote:
>
>>Forgive me!
>>
>>I have an old roadie in the basement I am rebuilding. Needs new tires. It has some pretty nice
>>mavic rims on it, 27". Will a 700 tire or tube fit this?
>
>
> No.
>
> 700c's are 29 inch wheels.
>

They're only called that because of some lame mtn bike marketeer, they were never called 29" until
a marketeer came up with the label so the public wouldn't recall the last round of 700c wheeled
mtn bikes. And just because some 700c mtn bike tires may be close to 29" in outer diameter doesn't
mean all will.

700c = 622 mm = 24.5" 27" = 630 mm = 24.8"

So close but no banana. But nowhere near the diff between 27" and 29". Some road bikes can even use
either rim if you have older long reach calipers with a lot of adjustment.

Greg

--
"Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late, the battles we fought were long and hard,
just not to be consumed by rock n' roll..." - The Mekons
 
Alex Ravenel wrote:
> OK, what should I get width-wise? I dont want to go with an inch, a little narrow--should I go 1
> 1/8 or 1 1/4?
>

I'd go with the 1 1/4. The only benefit of narrow tires is the ability to run 110 psi and up. At a
given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance (due to less hysteresis).

Greg

--
"Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late, the battles we fought were long and hard,
just not to be consumed by rock n' roll..." - The Mekons
 
"G.T." <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
> I'd go with the 1 1/4. The only benefit of narrow tires is the ability to run 110 psi and up. At a
> given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance (due to less hysteresis).

While that partially is true, it is not a valid argument. If two tires have identical construction,
except that one is wider, you should *not* run them at the same pressure. The narrower tire will
have a higher optimal pressure and thus a lower rolling resistance. The wider tire will weigh more
and roll slower, but give you a plusher ride, especially on rough roads.

Ken
 
Ken wrote:
> "G.T." <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
>
>>I'd go with the 1 1/4. The only benefit of narrow tires is the ability to run 110 psi and up. At a
>>given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance (due to less hysteresis).
>
>
> While that partially is true, it is not a valid argument. If two tires have identical
> construction, except that one is wider, you should *not* run them at the same pressure.

Why not? If the max pressure on a 1" tire is 140 psi and it's 100 psi on a 1 1/4" tire but you're
only planning on running 100 psi why can't you run the 1 1/4" at 100 psi?

> The narrower tire will have a higher optimal pressure and thus a lower rolling resistance.
> The wider tire will weigh more and roll slower, but give you a plusher ride, especially on
> rough roads.
>

And the wider tire has less rolling resistance at the same pressure just like I said (due to less
hysteresis). The wider tire will roll faster than the skinnier tire at the same pressure. Did you
read what I said? "At a given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance".

Greg

--
"Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late, the battles we fought were long and hard,
just not to be consumed by rock n' roll..." - The Mekons
 
G.T. wrote:
> Ken wrote:
>
>> "G.T." <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
>>
>>> I'd go with the 1 1/4. The only benefit of narrow tires is the ability to run 110 psi and up. At
>>> a given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance (due to less hysteresis).
>>
>>
>>
>> While that partially is true, it is not a valid argument. If two tires have identical
>> construction, except that one is wider, you should *not* run them at the same pressure.
>
>
> Why not? If the max pressure on a 1" tire is 140 psi and it's 100 psi on a 1 1/4" tire but you're
> only planning on running 100 psi why can't you run the 1 1/4" at 100 psi?
>
>> The narrower tire will have a higher optimal pressure and thus a lower rolling resistance.
>> The wider tire will weigh more and roll slower, but give you a plusher ride, especially on
>> rough roads.
>>
>
> And the wider tire has less rolling resistance at the same pressure just like I said (due to less
> hysteresis). The wider tire will roll faster than the skinnier tire at the same pressure. Did you
> read what I said? "At a given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance".
>
> Greg
>

Not sure if I can get my head around that one. You're saying that if I had a 1 meter wide tire, and
a 1cm wide tire (assuming smooth tread), then the 1 meter wide tire will roll faster, not taking int
account weight and momentum? The tire is going to have a larger contact patch, which means more
deformity of the tire with the surface its on, which means more energy loss (hence more hysteresis).
Granted, it'll have massive grip, but not sure if I agree with your statement. I'm probably wrong,
and would love to be proved so, but I can't get my mind around that one.

Jon Bond
 
Jonathan Bond wrote:
>
>
> G.T. wrote:
>
>> Ken wrote:
>>
>>> "G.T." <[email protected]> wrote in news:[email protected]:
>>>
>>>> I'd go with the 1 1/4. The only benefit of narrow tires is the ability to run 110 psi and up.
>>>> At a given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance (due to less hysteresis).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> While that partially is true, it is not a valid argument. If two tires have identical
>>> construction, except that one is wider, you should *not* run them at the same pressure.
>>
>>
>>
>> Why not? If the max pressure on a 1" tire is 140 psi and it's 100 psi on a 1 1/4" tire but you're
>> only planning on running 100 psi why can't you run the 1 1/4" at 100 psi?
>>
>>> The narrower tire will have a higher optimal pressure and thus a lower rolling resistance. The
>>> wider tire will weigh more and roll slower, but give you a plusher ride, especially on rough
>>> roads.
>>>
>>
>> And the wider tire has less rolling resistance at the same pressure just like I said (due to less
>> hysteresis). The wider tire will roll faster than the skinnier tire at the same pressure. Did you
>> read what I said? "At a given pressure fatter tires have less rolling resistance".
>>
>> Greg
>>
>
> Not sure if I can get my head around that one. You're saying that if I had a 1 meter wide tire,
> and a 1cm wide tire (assuming smooth tread), then the 1 meter wide tire will roll faster, not
> taking int account weight and momentum? The tire is going to have a larger contact patch, which
> means more deformity of the tire with the surface its on, which means more energy loss (hence more
> hysteresis). Granted, it'll have massive grip, but not sure if I agree with your statement. I'm
> probably wrong, and would love to be proved so, but I can't get my mind around that one.
>

I interchanged "less rolling resistance" and "rolling faster" because I was talking about tires of
only 1/4" difference in width and assuming they would be constructed similarly. A 1 1/4" wide tire
at 100 psi (if it's rated for 100 psi) will roll faster than a 1" wide tire at 100 psi if they are
constructed similarly. This is tires 101.

http://draco.acs.uci.edu/rbfaq/FAQ/8b.14.html

The reasons narrower tires usually have less rolling resistance is that they are usually constructed
differently than wider tires. If you take a Conti Grand Prix 25mm and a 20mm and inflate them to 95
psi the 25mm is going to be faster. This isn't specifically mentioned in the r.b.t. FAQ but this has
been discussed at length on r.b.t. I was schooled on this long ago.

Greg
--
"Destroy your safe and happy lives before it is too late, the battles we fought were long and hard,
just not to be consumed by rock n' roll..." - The Mekons
 
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