Vince@HED said:It makes me laugh at all the bashing on the wide rims (buy 1 person). If it is such a fad then how come it changed the entire bike industry in 2007?
The same people/companies that mocked us going wide miraculously "re-invented" their entire wheel line shortly after we did .......ie, wider rims. Now this is all you see. Numerous magazines have data showing how much faster wider rims are compared to the narrow rims. VeloNews Sept 10 mag. The fastest wheels were wide rim wheels.
Numerous teams are getting provisions in their contracts to ride wide rim wheels from other companies because their wheel sponsors do make wide rims yet. There must be a reason for that. Oh yeah, they are fast!
Just because you (again, talking to 1 person) dont believe in something doesn't give you the authority to bash/ban people or bad mouth companies that support this design ...... a design that is going to be here for a long time.
Have a great weekend
RDV4ROUBAIX said:The wider rims aren't so much about aerodynamics as they are handling. The selection of 20mm clincher tires is becoming less and less, you just named two of the biggest names in wheels, HED and Zipp, Velocity also mfg's the A23. Some are going with a 22mm wide rim like Easton and C-4. Who was that auto mfg that advertised wider is better? Dodge? As much as I hate snake oil salesmen of the ad world there is some actual truth to this claim, and it does relate to our wild wacky world of cycling.
ElChingon said:Well I think the whole wider rim and wider tire makes sense as much as narrow rim narrow tire do as well, same aero advantage as the turbulence listed won't form as long as there is no big gap between the two.
As for handling, I don't see a difference unless you mean 20mm tires tend to track like train rails which I think is the way to go, I hate that flex when you stand on wider tires. The pros probably want a wider rim for the cobbled races where they use wider tires, that makes sense as they should go together.
The for 20mm tires, am I the only one who can find them? Maybe I should stop stock piling them, then maybe the rest would find them still in stock. As for flats I think I have never flatted on a 20mm tire, or can't remember, as removing those are a chore and I'd remember if I had to.
For the snake oil, I think its really up to everyone's personal riding preference, some like the stiff feel, some like the softer feel which is why I wish the variety should stay and not have a universal size on things like tires and rims.
Too bad the story didn't include any data (hint to the story writer), which is what makes it all to snake oil-ish to begin with.
Actually the contact area/surface area is identical, where weight and pressure is the sameRDV4ROUBAIX said:Wider tires handle better because the contact patch is covering more surface area and doesn't give up rolling resistance to a smaller tire. Look at most all motorsports tires and rims, .... wider![]()
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Notso Swift said:Actually the contact area/surface area is identical, where weight and pressure is the same
RDV4ROUBAIX said:How is that possible? Given the same pressure and rider/bike weight, a 25mm tire is going to have a wider contact patch over a 20mm tire, especially when mounted to a wider rim like what we've been talking about![]()
RDV4ROUBAIX said:How is that possible? Given the same pressure and rider/bike weight, a 25mm tire is going to have a wider contact patch over a 20mm tire, especially when mounted to a wider rim like what we've been talking about![]()
BroDeal said:In an ideal model the contact patch will only depend on the tire pressure and the weight the tire is supporting. The real world is not ideal...
RDV4ROUBAIX said:The "puncture" claim relates to pinch flats when you have a 23mm wide rim capped with a 23mm tire. The sidewall is less apt to deform in this configuration because the wider rims are spreading out the tire and the sidewall isn't hanging over the rim edge, the result is less pinch flats and better handling.
Suppose if you're rolling 20's you have a 3mm buffer over a 23mm tire. That's a small margin if there ever was one. No matter what width tire you're riding, if you run over something sharp enough you're going to flat.
xmoonx said:Although you can use practically any tire/rim combination that shares the same bead seat diameter, it is unwise to use widely disparate sizes.
If you use a very narrow tire on a wide rim, you risk pinch flats and rim damage from road hazards.
If you use a very wide tire on a narrow rim, you risk sidewall or rim failure. This combination causes very sloppy handling at low speeds.
RDV4ROUBAIX said:How is that possible? Given the same pressure and rider/bike weight, a 25mm tire is going to have a wider contact patch over a 20mm tire, especially when mounted to a wider rim like what we've been talking about![]()
GreasyMonkey said:RDV, I have not come across these wide rims that are discussed - I assume that all of the discsussion is only relevant to clinchers, not tubs, as the rim bed for a tubular is not going to impact the effective tyre width, to my understanding & experience.
Am I correct on this?
I am an old-fart when it comes to rubber - Veloflex tubulars (Roubaix, Carbon & Record for TT's).
RDV4ROUBAIX said:It all started with HED a couple years ago, I think just about every wheelset they offer now is 23 wide clincher and tubular. Velocity has the A23 clincher and Major Tom tubular, both 23 wide. Zipp Cyclocross versions of the 303 and 404 tubulars are 25.4 wide, so I I'd say the benefit of a wider tubular is valid.
GreasyMonkey said:RDV, Thanks, it makes sense for the cyclocross application.
Would not like to think of riding a 32mm tub balancing on a 19mm bed......