#16
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Depends on your rims, some will cut up more than others due to poor testing and blame the tyre
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#17
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Bear in mind that the GP5000 is more true to size, and the 700 x 28 GP5000 is only marginally wider than a 700x25 GP4000
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#18
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Quote:
It's just a rule of thumb. You can propose a different one. With yours in order to halve the pressure you would only need to multiply the width by sqrt(2) for about a 41% increase in width. 25 to 35 mm is about that. |
#19
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Are you saying that an increase n millimeters would require .98^n times the pressure? So for example, 10mm would require about 82% the pressure for a decrease of 18%? That's the only way to make this consistent. If 10mm increase implies 20% less pressure, then someone would arrive at different final pressures depending on whether the width increase was all at once or in two or more successive increments.
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#20
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Good article on tire pressure https://janheine.wordpress.com/2016/...ure-take-home/
The chart by Frank Berto in the article is a good starting point. |
#21
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That’s too bad! Well, time will tell...
__________________
Livin’ the dream ( just like Mike ) |
#22
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Quote:
I would say that for the narrower tire sizes in the chart, those pressures seem a little low in terms of pinch-flat resistance. It matters how fast that the rider is traveling over what kind of road conditions though, since hitting even small rocks is usually what causes my occasional pinch flat while running 23mm tires at 90psi for my 145lb body mass. Paceline riding blocks one's view of the road, increasing the chances of hitting small-scale debris of the sort that doesn't usually get called out by leading riders. And I've never had much luck dropping the front tire pressure much below the rear tire's pressure, since pinch flats then seem to crop up before long. At least for me, the lower limit of pressure is primarily defined by the occurrence of pinch-flatting. I can get away with 90psi in a 23mm tire and 60psi in a 29mm tire (actual inflated widths), assuming that rim width somewhat grows with tire width. |
#23
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on my 23's i run 90-95, on my 25's i run 85-90 and on my 32's 70-75
hope that's a guide. |
#24
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Pressure drop for wider rim?
How much pressure would it be safe to reduce if going to a wider rim, 6mm wider?
Set up is 28C vittoria Corsa G+ Shamal rim c15 is 15mm inner , 75psi Hed Belgium+ is 21mm inner, 50psi On the c15 I was using 75 psi but on the Belgium+ the tires ballooned to 30mm at 50-60psi. I may have to go down to a 25mm tire to avoid wheel flex rubbing on the chain stays.
__________________
https://www.instagram.com/spinarelli/ |
#25
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Someone needs to ask Tom Brady what he thinks of this issue.
Robert Kraft might also have an opinion, but his involvement has been much overblown. |
#26
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A lot of 'modeling' going on for something that has a lot of variables - e.g., rim width, actual tire width, road conditions, and even rider weight I would imagine, etc. Given the known approximate decrease in pressure going up size, the only way forward is to tweak it and find out what is the best pressure for your given set of conditions.
__________________
“A bicycle is not a sofa” -- Dario Pegoretti |
#27
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Just stop at the PSI you like
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#28
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Thank you all for your input, much appreciated!
I guess what I was really after was knowing if I needed to go up or down. I do understand that there are MANY variables and I need to tweak it to my personal preference. Again, thank you!!!
__________________
Livin’ the dream ( just like Mike ) |
#29
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Too FUNNY!
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#30
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I also think rider weight has a lot to do with it. Featherweights can get by with a lower PSI without running the risk of a pinch flat. They're also likely to have less of that squishy feeling, particularly in the rear, by dropping additional PSIs.
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