I never had a problem riding on 23's.
It's not just the tyre size that makes a difference, so does the construction. I've just gone back from 25mm to 23mm on one bike and it's made a whole lot of difference to the ride comfort.
I've been running my PlanetX Pro Carbon on 25.5mm Jack Brown Race tyres which were made for Rivendell by Panaracer and sold through PlanetX for a while and are as below (not my pic)
View attachment 782562
They should have been good with a folding bead and light weight, but were possibly the worst tyres I've used - harsh ride and just didn't seem to provide any cushioning effect against the local crap roads. Don't know if it was caused by a very stiff and short sidewall - couldn't even do a quick thumb test to check the pressure as there was no give - or a harder rubber on the tread.
I swapped them out for a pair of dirt cheap (£7 each when I purchased them a couple of years ago) 23mm Vittoria Zaffiros this morning and went for a quick test ride - what a revelation. No road buzz, smoothed everything out nicely and I found myself going for a longer ride to try out known crap roads to confirm the better ride.
I suspect that a softer and deeper rubber compound on the tread combined with a taller and more compliant sidewall construction has helped with the improved comfort despite the narrower width and 10psi higher pressure.
I’ve ridden it in this morningYou’ve prompted me to take the ‘blue Ribble’ out of the shed, pump up the tyres, ‘diesel’ the chain, & go to work on it one day this week
(I finish at 20:00, so lights not required)
It’s got a fairly dire saddle on it, at the moment, as the ‘Flite’ (90s original) went onto the CGR that replaced it, & is now on my ‘Spa’
You don't need a gravel bike for this. Any road bike from the last 2-3 years that markets itself as an endurance bike (e.g. Canyon Endurace, Giant Defy, Specialized Roubaix, etc.) will have clearances for at least 36mm nowadays and will probably come with 30-32mm tyres on the stock wheels by default.
I doubt I would be able to ride on 23mm tyres now. But...
I genuinely miss the feeling of having to ride a machine that feels like it's right on the edge of failure. Hit a pothole and you get a puncture or pringle your wheel. There's a feeling of being at one with a machine like that.
Modern bikes are boring.
Avoid vaccines, eat cheap Fugu fish, play Russian Roulette? Drive the wrong way on the M25?
Walk on the cracks in the pavement?
I doubt I would be able to ride on 23mm tyres now. But...
I genuinely miss the feeling of having to ride a machine that feels like it's right on the edge of failure. Hit a pothole and you get a puncture or pringle your wheel. There's a feeling of being at one with a machine like that.
Modern bikes are boring.
No, none of those things. Those are stupid.
I do sometimes miss operating a very highly-strung bike though. Dangerous, and sometimes inconvenient? Yes. But fun all the same.
Ooh, get you, danger man! Not sure why you're trying to tell me how fast/good you are.What sort of crap bike were you riding then. I've still got my 35 year old steel bikes and they never felt like that. I'd be more happy pushing 60 mph on my handbuilt bike that's never had a speed wobble, than a mass produced modern bike.
OK, dangerous is a poor choice of words. But the point I'm trying to make is you have to be careful riding hard on a bike with 23mm tyres in a way that you don't have to be when you ride 1.75 tyres. Riding a bike like that gives you a different sort of focus because the tyres and wheels are more fragile, no matter what you say.23mm tyres dangerous?
OK, dangerous is a poor choice of words. But the point I'm trying to make is you have to be careful riding hard on a bike with 23mm tyres in a way that you don't have to be when you ride 1.75 tyres. Riding a bike like that gives you a different sort of focus because the tyres and wheels are more fragile, no matter what you say.