Thinking of a race/road bike.

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ben_miotti123

New Member
I am thinking of getting a race/road bike.
Does anyone know whether you can get thicker tyres for one or can you pout mountain bike tyres on?
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
no. Race/road bike wheels are greater diameter and narrower than mountain bike tyres, totally incompatible.

a good half way if you are bothered about road tyres is a cyclo cross bike. Slightly more relaxed riding position & capacity for a wider tyre than a straight up road bike, but these still don't take mountain bike tyres.

no disrespect intended but this sort of question is extremely basic and doesn't suggest any sort of research or even having looked at the different types of bike. Best bet if not trolling is to go to a local bike shop and sit on a few, speak with the sales people and discuss the type of riding you'll be doing and whether you want comfort over speed etc and go from there before worrying about swapping tyres about.
 

Cyclist33

Guest
Location
Warrington
no. Race/road bike wheels are greater diameter and narrower than mountain bike tyres, totally incompatible.

a good half way if you are bothered about road tyres is a cyclo cross bike. Slightly more relaxed riding position & capacity for a wider tyre than a straight up road bike, but these still don't take mountain bike tyres.

no disrespect intended but this sort of question is extremely basic and doesn't suggest any sort of research or even having looked at the different types of bike. Best bet if not trolling is to go to a local bike shop and sit on a few, speak with the sales people and discuss the type of riding you'll be doing and whether you want comfort over speed etc and go from there before worrying about swapping tyres about.


... Or they could ask the same questions of their friendly local internet-based cycling chat forum.

As above, if you look into cyclocross bikes they will have clearance in the frame for tyres that, while of a different diameter than *some* mountain bikes, have the same sort of tread patterns and you can get widths approaching that of the skinnier mountain bike tyres.

I personally find smooth road tyres, er, smoother on the roads, even if significantly thinner than cross tyres. And you get more grip. But each to their own, I say.

Stu
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
... Or they could ask the same questions of their friendly local internet-based cycling chat forum.
as they did and got a perfectly sensible answer to the question asked and additional spontaneous suggestions to assist their thinking and good advice based on the level of understanding shown to go and look in the shops and speak to people about the type of riding they'll be doing, which we are second guessing.
 

beardy01

Well-Known Member
Location
edenbridge
I am thinking of getting a race/road bike.
Does anyone know whether you can get thicker tyres for one or can you pout mountain bike tyres on?
Went to evans to pick my bike up after repair and was speaking to one of the sales staff and he had just bought a cyclo cross bike and was raving about it, said its more comfortable on the road than a road bike as it has slightly wider tyres and is good off road too. Think it was a pinnacle , on offer at the mo only downside was a very lary green colour. Hope this helps
 

MikeW-71

Veteran
Location
Carlisle
I have both a Road and a CX bike. The CX has disc brakes and lots of tyre clearance. It came with 35mm tyres that can cope with mild off-road and are pretty good on-road too. Normally I have some 28mm slicks fitted to it, which is lovely.

The Road bike runs 23mm slicks, I could get 25mm on it, but that's the limit of the brake clearance. It's still comfortable though.
 

Cyclist33

Guest
Location
Warrington
as they did and got a perfectly sensible answer to the question asked and additional spontaneous suggestions to assist their thinking and good advice based on the level of understanding shown to go and look in the shops and speak to people about the type of riding they'll be doing, which we are second guessing.

Not forgetting a rather rude, condescending and unwelcoming attitude to someone embarking on the one true path.
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
Not forgetting a rather rude, condescending and unwelcoming attitude to someone embarking on the one true path.
AKA an honest observation based on the post and followed up by more helpful advice directly related to the comment, I suggested the question is basic & again not uniquely to this site wondered if it was genuine (think the grief Matthew & Soup just for 2 off the top of my head got from the off), you choose to pick on a small part of the first person to answer in the context of not only answering the question but giving extra unsolicited suggestions and advice. I stick by it too, I genuinely think his first port of call should be a bike shop to see and get a feel for the type of bike he needs for the riding he'll be doing which isn't clear from the conflicted info in the first post.

smooth road tyres are er, smoother on the road? If you want to dig into semantics, the er makes.that comment rather less friendly than it could be.
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
I am thinking of getting a race/road bike.
Does anyone know whether you can get thicker tyres for one or can you pout mountain bike tyres on?
Anyhow. 1st my apologies for my part in your thread being hijacked and disappearing off piste.

I would suggest in the first instance you to go to a few bike shops and discuss your needs there to fune tune your thinking and options then come back here with a few bikes you are genuinely interested in to ask for existing owners opinions and thoughts.

I shall leave the grumpy old man squabbling alone.
 

SteCenturion

I am your Father
Halfords have some very nice looking & very good quality Boardman CX cyclocross type bikes that maybe fit the bill, they're worth a look.

The 'Team' model I think it's called, in a very cool chrome type finish is particularly good looking & seems good value.

I am not that clued up about CX but I think they take anything from 28 to mid 30's profile tyres.
 

annirak

Veteran
Location
Cambridge, UK
Does that matter? Fact is, he does, or at least is asking the question.
Of course it matters. Mtb tyres don't fit a road bike. There are lots of possible replies, though, ranging from "don't worry about it, slick tyres have plenty of grip" all the way to "you'd probably be happier with a mountain bike." Which of these answers to give depends entirely on the reason why the OP wants mtb tyres.
 

Cyclist33

Guest
Location
Warrington
Of course it matters. Mtb tyres don't fit a road bike. There are lots of possible replies, though, ranging from "don't worry about it, slick tyres have plenty of grip" all the way to "you'd probably be happier with a mountain bike." Which of these answers to give depends entirely on the reason why the OP wants mtb tyres.

It doesn't matter. Why must you assume that you need to challenge the OP's preference? He wants a road bike that you can put thicker tyres on (presumably, mountain bike style tyres, and yes I know the diameter of the wheels can be different but he obviously means the tread). There's only one type of bike fits that description. Cyclocrosser.
 

annirak

Veteran
Location
Cambridge, UK
Yes, Cyclocross is one entry on the range of possible replies.

What, would you have preferred it if I'd said the following?
"You could get a cyclocross bike, but I might be able to make other suggestions if you would be so kind as to indicate to me the line of reasoning that led you to decide you wanted a road bike with MTB tyres."

Please. Cyclocross has already been covered in the thread. I can't contribute anything meaningful without more data.

I didn't really know what I wanted when I got my hybrid. I thought I was getting a "best of both worlds." I was actually getting a best of none. I WISH someone had asked my why I wanted a hybrid. I WISH someone had asked me the questions I ask others now. I WISH someone had suggested I get a CX bike. I would have been far happier with it and I would now own one bike, not two.
 
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