Well, I've been racing for over 40 years, so I do tend to find things that work and stick with them. If wider were always faster, everyone would be on fat bikes. We're on 25mm tubulars for crits and 23 mm tubulars for some road races (and up to 28mm tubeless in others). Depending on the event and track, 19-22mm (and over 200psi).RangerRick9211 said:Racing on 25s is so 10 years ago.TxsAggieFn said:I race road on 25's, but my gravel bike has 40's (slicks). In looking at similar solo rides, the speed difference is pretty consistently 1.5mph. While it's probably not linear, we can extrapolate out that 1mm = 0.1mph, so 0.2mph.FIDO95 said:
Has anyone had the experience of going from 28mm tires to 30mm?
I went to have a fitting done recently and they noted a crack my carbon frame near the rear derailleur. They gave me some guidance but recommended riding my current bike with caution. So now I'm looking a new bike and trying to decide between a Canyon Endurace (30mm) vs Canyon Ultimate (28mm). I've seen recent recommendations for moving to 30mm if you are doing more long, slow type rides as opposed to racing. I do enjoy the long, low stress rides more. The Endurace is obviously designed for that kind of riding but 30mm tires just seem like mountain bike tires to me!?
It would seem the wider tires would add comfort at the cost of a few watts. 3-5 is what I'm seeing with very little under 20m/hr where aerodynamics is less of an issue. Since I'm more of a causal rider, the argument for 30mm tires is that I'm more likely to notice the comfort than the watts. Any thoughts?
It should be noted that these similar rides are on pretty smooth roads. On rougher roads like chip/seal, there would be less speed difference as the wider tires would roll over imperfections better. You might not have a speed difference, and you'd gain some comfort. On longer rides & events, you might even be stronger at the end because of reduced fatigue.
So, I'd go with the 30's for a bike you're not racing if everything else is equal.
OP, I don't think you'll notice a difference between 28 and 30mm. Hint, if you're running 28mm tubeless you're probably already running close to 30mm. Rolling resistance and comfort overwhelmingly leans 28-30mm tubeless.
But tires should never the deciding factor between an Ultimate or Endurace. Buy for geometry - swapping tires is easy.Technically, the wider your go, the lower the rolling resistance and faster the tire:Quote:
In looking at similar solo rides, the speed difference is pretty consistently 1.5mph. While it's probably not linear, we can extrapolate out that 1mm = 0.1mph, so 0.2mph.
Crr in isolation is real savings in watts and is linear with speed (the faster you go, the more watts Crr consumes; the larger the savings from a lower drag coefficient tire). There will be added grams as you go larger (so at some point grams will > Crr savings in watt terms). The wheel you choose to accompany a specific tire can either make it more or less aero. After 15 mph or so, aero is the driving drag force.
https://www.bicyclerollingresistance.com/specials/grand-prix-5000-s-tr-comparison
Wider is only better on certain surfaces, and at lower speeds. Racing is at higher speeds, and often on better surfaces. That's why we still use down to 19mm in some situations. Additionally, mass start racing is dynamic, so in addition to aerodynamics, the amount of mass that the additional rubber, additional rim material, and greater number air molecules that come with larger tires plays a hugely negative factor on every acceleration. As you pointed out, rolling resistance becomes less and less important after 15mph.
Back to common ground and the post that we were replying to: for that rider, wider is going to be better.
You also make a great point that the frame geometry is more important because tires and wheels are interchangeable. I'd add that a bike with greater range in width is probably a better choice. Then again, I use 40's on gravel when something narrower might be a little faster. That's because I HATE getting flats, and enjoy the extra comfort. But, I also use slime tubes for general gravel riding and only go tubeless for gravel races.
These conundrums and contradictions are part of the fun of cycling!