Hawk
Veteran
- Location
- Glasgow Southside
Okey Dokey: so what can I do to avoid loosing more studs? Am I right to have let some air out?
The rest will be bedded in more nicely so you'll stop losing them in the next 30 miles.
Okey Dokey: so what can I do to avoid loosing more studs? Am I right to have let some air out?
Thank you Hawk, a sensible answer from you, not like Potsy's!The rest will be bedded in more nicely so you'll stop losing them in the next 30 miles.
Man, instructions?You went off roading on you first ride? Did you not read the instructions on the tyre label?![]()
32's seem to be the smallest Matthew.Is there anything such as a 23c studded tyre? I have seen 35's but they wont fit on my bike. So can you have 23's or 25's?
So whats the alternative in snow and ice?32's seem to be the smallest Matthew.
Point of order, Pat, we ripped Potsy to pieces last year when he first confessed to his buffoonery, probably best to take it easy on him now.You went off roading on you first ride? Did you not read the instructions on the tyre label?![]()
Get another bike which can take wider tyres is about the best. As the tyres are £40 each, getting a second hand rigid MTB to stick them on isn't that that silly.So whats the alternative in snow and ice?
I already have a MTB but I doubt I would be able to do my commute in the same time as when on my racer. Using the MTB just isnt convenient.Get another bike which can take wider tyres is about the best. As the tyres are £40 each, getting a second hand rigid MTB to stick them on isn't that that silly.
True. If the snow is so thick that the bus isnt running or wouldnt get there on time (I can beat the bus on my commute by 15 mins normally) then I would probably take the MTB. I would just have to remember to fit the pannier rack the night before.Well of course it won't be as fast as your road bike... but there are things more important than time.
Good point.I think Matthew is going to college so I'd bet they would shut for snow as well.
Pump the tyres up to maximum pressure and stick to tarmac for the bedding in period, to minimise the movement in the rubber and the chance to ping out studs. And keep the pressures up whenever you are on tarmac, but drop them a bit when the ice appears. Once bedded in, they are considerably quieter and the studs should be more secure.
I have commuted on mine for the past couple of weeks and lost only 2 studs at the front and, as far as I could see, none at the back. They proved quite grippy on tarmac, I slowly built up confidence but there is still a significantly vague feeling to the initial steering input.
I took them off this evening, though, I'll be running on City Jets again for a bit.