T4tomo
Legendary Member
I seen more resilient carrots than that tyre!
Full marks to the German for his humour!Well, they are Continentals - maybe they are not built to be used on an island? 🤔

Full marks to the German for his humour!Well, they are Continentals - maybe they are not built to be used on an island? 🤔
So these Continentals then.
I had to do an emergency brake and stop the other day as someone came around a roundabout and they weren’t indicating.
Anyway, long story short, I had to really slam the brakes on and skidded to a halt.
Walking my bike through the station this morning, it felt like there was something stuck on the tyre. There was a pronounced bump as I wheeled it.
Checked it when I could to see that it’s worn through all the rubber to the cords. After just one skid. The result is a pronounced flat spot. More noticeable on the super-smooth tiles in the train station. But I've not noticed it on the road - as the surface is so bad.
According to MainTrack I’ve done a total of 443 miles on them. So apart from this patch, they're in pretty good nick. Was a bit surprised at how quickly that went through.
I’ll post a pic when I remove them.
What a ball ache. Front one not ridiculously difficult, but the lack of quick release on the break makes reinserting the wheel, a bit of a Pfaff.
wow, what were you riding on? that's astounding!
anyone else had this type of continental problem?
20k miles on one set of Urbans on a Brompton?my Conti Urbans are up to 20,000 miles now
20k miles on one set of Urbans on a Brompton?![]()
Well the 406 size on my recumbent. I haven’t done 20,000 yet on my Brommie on Urbans
Presumably the front one? Which doesn't take a lot of weight, especially if you have.helium filled ankles...
Front takes 45% of weight on my recumbent, weight balance being 55/45. But I do have the dainty ankles that make grown women faint.
I don't get anyone who is keen to change the tyre/s on the side of the road. Seriously? I would understand doing it when you are stuck on a some long trip. On other hand for someone commuting in London the best thing is to fold the bike and use some sort of public transport. Play with tyres at home. I would actually go with Continental as they are lighter and can save quite significant weight.