Sujet : Re: Rolling Resistance
De : mcleary08 (at) *nospam* comcast.net (Mark J cleary)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 21. Jun 2025, 16:29:34
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <1036j4t$14qu2$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/21/2025 3:08 AM, Roger Merriman wrote:
AMuzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
On 6/20/2025 6:04 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 6/20/2025 4:34 PM, cyclintom wrote:
If you scan the rolling resistance chart all of the lowest
rolling resistance is on 25 mm tires. What that implies is
that the drum is entirely out of sync with the real world
since wider tires with lower pressures are both faster and
less likely to puncture. It is time fore the rolling
resistance people to redesign their setups to have more
connection to reality. My speed after two weeks off of the
bike with 32 mm tires is half a mph faster than riding a
lot on 28's
>
I'm going to shock people by agreeing with you on one point.
I do think the current test rigs for rolling resistance need
serious improvement. I've mentioned that before.
>
>
+1
A long time complaint here on RBT beginning with Mr Brandt
long ago. Steel drum tests can be very accurately measured
but what they measure leaves a void between that and our
actual world.
>
Particularly the small drums and smooth drums that
bicyclerollingresistance.com uses hence its data doesn’t correlate that
well to MTB tyres in particular.
Silverstone has a much bigger drum with all sorts of surfaces, that folks
like Dylan Johnson have used to test tyres (MTB) which has correlated with
his real world testing so is bit more faith in that drum and set up, but
even so that it’s a hugely simplified model of the world must be accounted
for plus is one’s goal just speed?
Certainly off road even if one wants to ride fast, a fast rolling tyre
isn’t always your friend, the Thunderburts which are light with out much
tread are popular as fast tyres be that Gravel or XC but they are very much
terrain specific!
Even in mid summer descending on the steep grassy slope off the top of the
mountain to my folks place, with those you’d be running wide on the turns
in any other season you’d not make the turn!
Roger Merriman
I remember saying I got a lot miles on my tires compared to what others were getting and Mike Jacoubosky say it was because I did not climb. He said that climbing will wear tires out more. Mike is a Trek store owner in Redwood California and I respect is opinions but generally would disagree with this. I can see that going up long grades you go slower turnover and possible some more tire wear but nothing like seemed to imply. His implication was climbing is hard on tires.
-- Deacon Mark