How much pressure?

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S-Express

Guest

Because a smaller contact patch does not necessarily equal less rolling resistance. There's so much more to it than that. In many cases, a tyre with lower pressure will roll better than the same tyre at a higher pressure. This is not new information, by the way.
 

r04DiE

300km a week through London on a road bike.
Because a smaller contact patch does not necessarily equal less rolling resistance. There's so much more to it than that. In many cases, a tyre with lower pressure will roll better than the same tyre at a higher pressure. This is not new information, by the way.
It's new information to me so perhaps I should apologise for my ignorance.
 

S-Express

Guest
Have you any data to back that up?

Data to back it up? I thought it was common knowledge. All things being equal, on a smooth surface, a tyre will roll better at high pressure. Which is why trackies tend to go for high pressures (ie 120+) and (conversely) why P-R riders tend to go for wider tyres at lower pressures. On a 'real world' road surface, with all its various imperfections, a lower pressure will allow the casing to deflect more, thereby enabling the tyre to absorb road shocks, rather than bounce over them. Bouncing obviously diverts the wheel upwards, rather than forwards.

A quick scan through google should be all you need.
 
U

User6179

Guest
Data to back it up? I thought it was common knowledge. All things being equal, on a smooth surface, a tyre will roll better at high pressure. Which is why trackies tend to go for high pressures (ie 120+) and (conversely) why P-R riders tend to go for wider tyres at lower pressures. On a 'real world' road surface, with all its various imperfections, a lower pressure will allow the casing to deflect more, thereby enabling the tyre to absorb road shocks, rather than bounce over them. Bouncing obviously diverts the wheel upwards, rather than forwards.

A quick scan through google should be all you need.


That was not what you said though , you said

"a tyre with lower pressure will roll better than the same tyre at a higher pressure"

Which is incorrect !
 

S-Express

Guest
That was not what you said though , you said

"a tyre with lower pressure will roll better than the same tyre at a higher pressure"

Which is incorrect !

Except I preceded that statement with the phrase "In many cases" - maybe you forgot to read that bit?
 

simongt

Guru
Location
Norwich
After blowing out a 120 psi tyre inflated to it's max, going over a number of cattle grids in about a mile. I now, on sage advice from a VERY good LBS, now inflate to 10 psi below the max stated on the tyre wall. Seems to do the business for me.
 

Ajax Bay

Guru
Location
East Devon
Have you any data to back that up? , all the data I have saw says the opposite!
and @r04DiE
This article gives some useful arguments (if not data) on which @S-Express may be drawing (albeit with careless phrasing), and I recommend it to you. The main argument is that by running wider tyres at lower pressures you reduce the suspension losses in the rider/bike combo and thus real rolling resistance is reduced. On a smooth drum (ie the rollingresistance.com tests) rollingresistance reduces very slightly as the pressure on the same tyre is increased - but this higher pressure results in more, for want of a better word, 'bouncing' on rough surfaces (eg roads) which actually means a narrower tyre at higher pressure (to avoid pinch flats) is 'slower'. Edit: this may be @S-Express "in many cases' ie not on tracks.

At higher speeds (eg 45+kph) aero aspects may come into play, and wider tyres tend to be heavier (which may be an issue if lots of acceleration involved - as opposed to steady riding). It would be excellent if tyre manufacturers of the good road tyres (Michelin, Continental, Vittoria, Schwalbe et al) made 28s which measured 28 and 32s in the same 'road tyre' range, as opposed to the step across (ie not up) to the fastest but heavier 'touring' tyres eg M Supremes.
 
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S-Express

Guest
This article gives some useful arguments (if not data) on which @S-Express may be drawing

I'm not drawing from anything in particular - I honestly thought this was a generally-known thing. I don't know any riders that don't already understand this stuff. Except some on here, clearly.

Here's an interesting article from Hunt, which does describe the issue better. https://www.huntbikewheels.com/pages/recommended-tyre-pressures

Let the post-rationalisation and cognitive dissonance commence...
 
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