I took my Hard tail Mtb for a spin yesterday, right after my fixed. The difference is insane. The transition between these two feels exactly the same as from a regular Mtb to a fat bike 😂. But also I really really REALLY enjoyed coasting on it and just riding over anything without really feeling it compared to the fixed gear where you feel anything you roll over. Even ants.
@@thepedlad7946 already did that. Didn't know what tires size I can ride on my 400 Euro Unknown SC-1 before, but after improving the fork (getting rid of some ugly welding spots that stuck out) I was able to go up from the stock 23c's to 28c's and now I even got a new fork in the mail so Im going to pump it up to 32c's. But that's going to be it. Can't get bigger in the rear. I'm already at the rear end of the dropouts.
I switch my 25c tires to 35c and at first I thought the 35c were going to be sluggish. Couldn’t be more wrong, not only could I ride faster with the 35c and more comfortably, but best part is my back and neck doesn’t ache anymore after a ride.
@Raphael Gallo still the same rims. As switching from a 23c to a 35c unsure, but according to my research, your rim should be able to handle a 28c tire.
@Raphael Gallo i ride 40s on a set of 16mm rims. You will be fine with 35 for sure! Don't settle with anything less and maybe don't go any bigger to stay safe in the corners
25c front and rear for the win in my opinion! Although, depending on the build, 28c looks great. I personally like the bumpy ride and the response of feeling everything.
I know you mostly cover fixed gear stuff but I ride a steel frame road bike bianchi from the 90s and I love your channel Zach. I use 32s and I love them they feel the perfect happy medium between wide and skinny. They are very comfortable and my bike is a blast to ride
I think my city all-rounder fixie tyre is Continental SuperSport, 28. I love them. They are so smooth, got the grip, and city-fast. And puncture protected.
Bike came with 23's and got a 25 for the rear after too many punctures. Rode like that for 2 years but it was a pain to avoid cracks, bumps and rough streets. Yes, they are responsive, but too much for my taste. 3 days ago I got a pair of Conti Ultra Sport 28's and I'm riding in heaven, the comfort is unmatched and I can enjoy the ride more. Yes, they provide more momentum, and that translates into slower launches but easier speed. I very seldom skid so I hope they'd last me for a good time. -A
I'm currently on 28 c gatorskin in the front and Randonneur 28 c in the back for maximum fixie points. Randos are cheap, durable plus the red stripe is a badge of honor.
Really great overview. Just picked up fixed gear cycling again after move to Vallejo, and got two front tire flats two days in a row. Started boning up on tires. Good luck in Taipei, thanks for this great video.
Moving from road 25C to gravel-ish 28C as we have loads of good, crushed stone/ gravel trails around Chicagoland. Excited to try them out. Thanks for the helpful pros and cons!
I've been running 28c Panaracer Pasela PTs on my Fuji Feather (the biggest tires I can get on the bike), and I love them. They handle the limited amount of dirt I hit on my rides just fine. I've got 23c Grand Prix 4000 on my road bike, and those are great, but I'm gonna upgrade them to 25c some day. I've never been a fan of Gatroskins, though. My brother has those on his road bike and I just never liked how they felt.
I run 48cm Rene Herse Ultralight tires on my Crust Lightning Bolt single speed. Love that they work great on dirt as well as bad pavement, and they give a supple and comfortable ride.
Years ago, I bought a used Trek 500 series that had 23s. I pop them the first time I wrote over the railroad tracks going into Old Sacramento. I replace those with 32 cyclocross tires and they work a lot better. Thanks for the video. And thanks for the my Sacramento memories.
I've ridden 28mm for a couple of years until Continental came out with the Grand Prix 5000 32mm. These are plush in comparison to 28mm's and the compound is very very fast. They are extremely grippy and climbing with them is a revelation. They just fly up hills, likely due to the extra width providing extra surface to drive off of. The rolling resistance of the 32mm is only a half watt more than the 28 which is the quickest. However they are actually faster at pressures below 80psi which is where I ride them at. Never below 60 and usually 75 psi is the sweet spot. In fact the 32 mm GP 5000's are faster than the 25mm GP 4000s II's at the same pressures and at every pressure. The 4000s II's which are amongst the fastest you can buy and were until recently in the top ten fastest tires (have now dropped below the top 15). Now the 5000's are in the top 5 fastest and the 32mm's are in the top ten with added comfort with way more protection given the extra rubber and width. Deflection is ridiculously low with low vibration. (Zach by the way, is speaking about deflection wrong I believe. High deflection is bad causing the tire to skip over surface irregularities, causing vibration and less grip and actually causes higher rolling resistance as each skid causes increased resistance. Low deflection is better. Zach just had it in reverse but what otherwise said was accurate.) Anyways I highly recommend the Continental GP 5000 in 28 or 32mm. I prefer the 32s. Much more comfortable, just as fast. I've put over 4000 miles on them so far and haven't had a flat yet and have only needed to pick out one piece of glass so far. I only have 1500 miles on the 28mm but it is much the same though they are less durable and seem to be wearing slightly faster. The 32's have no cuts very few abbrassions and I'd say are highly durable, again with not one flat. I have ridden them through in the dirt on medium trails on my single speed (I rarely ride fixed now, Single speed is faster. It just is). I've been through many sketchy roadways with lots of glass and metal pieces lying around everywhere and no problems. Again I highly recommend them.
700x35 Panaracer Gravelking SS on my TrackloCross. GP5000 in 700x28 on my track bikes for full on speed. 28 front & 32 Gatorskin on my fixed steel commuter. 25 front & 28 back VITTORIA CORSA G 2.0 for my Crit Machine.
Ive ridden 700c 23-25 mm for years. I recently bought a cheap mountain bike with 26 wheels and fat tires. I was surprised by how much more distance fat tires take up per peddle vs skinny tires.
i’m running 32c because i’m a bit of a heftier rider. i feel like when i hop off a curb with anything smaller the tire is gonna pop lol. in fact, speaking from personal experience
@@sour3000 its not that i dont worry about getting a flat i do but the ''hardness'' for me its like tire its ok and softy bigger ones i feel weird my mind its just used to harsh rides
Newer version of Continental 4000 is the 5000, though there was an in-between version called the 4000RS (sometimes discounted). You can get these up to 28mm wide.
I run 650b x 47 WTB Horizons, tubeless, on my Surly Steamroller, and it's incredible! I can ride anywhere, they are super smooth, and the grip is unmatched. Highly recommend 650b conversions for fixed gears, so you can max out the tire size.
Hey Jordan! I am planning a bike build similar to what you describe and am struggling to find a 650b fixed wheel set. I am thinking of building them myself but it would be my first and am still looking for options. Did your Steamroller come with wheels or did you make them custom?
I will tell you on my road bike I road 19mm 25mm and 28 mm tires and found 28mm the best On my other bike I road between 1.5 inches to 2 inches No there not fixed gears but I can tell you I one hundred percent agree with this video It makes 100% sense these pros and cons God the fixed gears look great I wish my local shops had fixed gears
I am currently getting Michelin Protek Max in 28cs right now, it's gonna be comfortable ride! Let's not forget the mention of my gear ratio, which is is 44/16! Spinning is winning.
My worst crash was also a RR track. The tire got swallowed up, and off I went. Fractured pelvis (which really hurts, BTW); cracked rib, broken wrist. Interestingly, though, I did learn that if you are lying in the road at 5:45 am in Germantown, TN, cars will drive around you. But I was riding a wide tire. That was a pretty big gap - and the track crosses the road at an odd angle. Many riders have fallen there.
My feather came with vittoria zafiro on 25. I switched up to gatorskins on 28 (because i saw it on a flashy yellow bike).I feel enough difference since i ride on these wider tires improving comfort. I got a hard punch in the back wheel and the tire now feels bumpy, is like ride on bad pavement but is my tire (not my rim).
I've never even seriously considered going fixed gear, but I love your videos. My road bike has 42s and my mountain bikes always have 3in, but still love the content.
I have a constantine drag fixie and I had 23c tires at first and changed to 28c tires and I love riding the 28c tires. Planning to build a tracklocross in the future
The Grand Prix 4K have no protection and typically run wider than similar sized Gatorskins. Just an FYI to potential purchasers. I have 3T fork that maxes at 25c, I can fit 28c Gatorskins in there with minimal rub, while the 28c Grand Prix 4K rub a lot. It may have to do with the stiffness of the Gatorskins, but I prefer them for the protection.
23c-25 has a less contact from the tire to the pavement. Wider tires like 28c-38c has a higher contact of tire to the pavement which is why you can feel slow on a wide tire than a skinny one
I can't wait for this video. I'm currently running 23c thickslicks on the front(looks 25c inflated) and 25c gatorskins on the back. I'm thinking of running with 30c on the front and back but I don't know if my colossi Mondial track can accommodate those tires.
For the price of the higher end Wabi framesets, you could get a custom Chinese titanium frameset from Waltly or Titan. Or you could opt for the custom titanium frame and a carbon fork from Aliexpress. Point is you can go nuts with whatever dimensions you want, add a tapered head tube, T47 bottom bracket, zero toe overlap even with a midfoot position and 60 mm tires.
@BeboSaab I don't, but I do have a custom titanium allroad bike and hardtail mountain bike. They're pretty great, I used the free version of Bikecad to get the geometry, they use that to make you detailed drawings for manufacturing. It takes from a few to several iterations till you can give them the go ahead to begin making the frame[set]. I got the allroad frameset for 1150 USD shipped and the mtb frame for 930 USD shipped, although I would recommend just getting an Aliexpress carbon fork and use that for the geometry of the frame instead of paying more for a custom fork. It ain't cheap but it's not a bad price if you compare it to getting a local custom frame. You do have to make sure that you know what you want and to thoroughly check the drawings they give you, because they'll make whatever is on there even if it's a bad idea. Their English is quite acceptable. www.spanner.org.uk/ This is a blog about custom Chinese titanium frames, the guy offers guidance for a price. But that's not necessary, the blog does have useful information. I didn't know of the blog till after I got the first bike.
its not just about the tyre width but also the tread thickness. some tyres are simply thicker than others. most race tyres are super thin and arent meant to be ridden for months on end. there are some good 28/32 tyres with proper thickness that offer a good mix of both. the only problem i ever have is the profile. the profile can cost you alot of rolling resistance but is fundamental in wet conditions. so the real question is wet vs dry and how much air pressure depending on what kind of surface you plan on riding.
My go to for tires fg are 25mm Schwalbe Marathon Plus because I hate flats. Got them anyway. So, I switched to 28mm and haven't had a flat since 2008 on my fg.
I'm currently using 32mm Bontrager tyres on my old framed single speed that I'm work with as a delivery guy and also commute everywhere with, and I really would want to use 28, or even 25mm tyres, but roads in my city are in really bad quality, the old town is filled with historic cobblestone and I'm scared it wouldn't give me any real benefits since I'm alredy scared to go in bigger speed throught bumps and pothols. I consider trying 30mm tyres, as many modern fixed framesets allow this size as biggest possible, but I'm also thinking about changing it to more comfortable 35mm tyres possibly with some tread on sides, since I have room for them and my machine alredy isn't the fastest. Ach, problems, I probably should just try both sizes.
I have narrow wheels (622x14), even 32mm look on them like a light bulb, so I'm not sure about getting even wider tyres, they wouldn't settle goodly on such slim rims. When I change rims the next gonna be wider, so i'll consider getting 35mm tyres. I'm not really the super strong cyclist, even when working I only cycle for about 7 hours a day and on 2.69 (43x16) gear ratio, so easier ride and benefit from narrower tyres gonna be appreciated.
I'm thinking about wider rims but also 30mm tyres; supposedly wide rims give more comfort and cussioning. 40x18 is only 2.22 ratio, that's super low for my taste, you're not annoyed from getting feeling of owerpedaling? I'll consider something less than 2.40 only for MTB or commuting in super hilly town.
I always fit the fattest tire I can. The tiny amount of rolling resistance and increase weight for me is negligible compared to all the benefits of wider tires.
Larger tires have less rolling resistance at the same pressure. Rated pressure for 28’s is 85-95. 25’s are 115-125. 28’s and bigger have a lot of rolling resistance lower than 100psi. 25c is the fastest tire and isn’t a “dying size” at all.
After 150k km and any types of riding and dozens of different king of bike i may say... The best tire is changing all the time depending on your surface conditions, your skill and what want to do. There is no single 'one' tire. But high end class tires always feels good, nothing but the best is needed.
Is there an easy way to check how wide a tire your bike can fit? For example measure the distance between your rear seat stays and minus 10mm for clearance. Or measure the space available inside the front rim to the bottom of the brake caliper. Its a generic track frame with horizontal dropouts. I have 23mm on the bike with a bunch of space possibly for 32mm or 36mm. I would like to be able to ride on a bumpy paved bike trail with a 2 mile gravel causeway on one end. Overall it would turn a dull heavy frame into a solid comfortable 4 season bike. How do Thick Slicks do in Rain/slushy weather?
I would just say go to your local bike store or even more preferably a co-op with your bike and ask them to let you try a different size to see how big you can fit. Every coop I’ve ever been to has been super cool about letting people borrow tools and fix things yourself so you probably shouldn’t have an issue. Especially if your going to actually buy one.
Hi! Thank you for this information. You are exactly what I was looking for. I have a fixie, used to ride in the city. Move to the woods, road are gravel and I made a trail around the property. Gravel, wood sticks, acorns everywhere, I figure to retire the fixie since I never knew I could change the tire. Excuse my ignorance, this bike was a gift a while back to go group city bike rides. I have no idea yet, about where to measure to find a non skinny tire for my bike. I’d appreciate if you or anyone with experience would be so kind to help me. I want to ride my fixie on the trail. Thank you. ☺️
Running 32c 4seasons black on my geared bike and 28c ultra sports ..pretty fast, and besides popping them bunny hopping nearly never get a flat. Medium is the best imho.
The Trick to stopping flats with skinny tires is TUFFY liners- I ride 700 x 16c. Fast as hell but You feel EVERY CRACK especially when you use clipless(Those metal plates in the shoes) feel the road like nothing else.
That resistance against sharp object damage that Schwalbe Marathons have comes from 5 to 7 mm extra rubber thickness and not from extra width. So called "Unflatable Technology". Primitive but effective. Thick tyre with thin rubber will puncture as easily as anything.
To me compound is more important then width, not many 23,s actually measure 23 once mounted, for a commuter tire it’s hard to beat the specialized turbo 26x700 they are almost impossible to flatten, got over 3000 miles on 2 dif sets zero flats so far, panaracer pasella is a hard tire to beat if your on a budget they roll nice grip decent and are puncture proof, have tryed almost all the tires on the market, there is only 2 brands that I use conti and specialized rubber, Victoria makes a decent product as well Rubino is decent for the price
Surly steamroller*** i love my bike. My only complaints are that it doesn't have canti mounts or rack mounts. I have a ss/fixed crosscheck as well but its way slower handling. I may throw on some wide risers to the crosscheck because it may just be that im running drops
I'm kinda sick of punctures on my 25c. And i'm looking forward to get a 32c. I assume those should be more protective against little rocks and stuff. Am i right?
I have the way opposite. I find 23c is more comforts than 25c, call me crazy but I am serious. I try to use every possible air pressures, can't get 25c right on spots. My rim is 18-19c internal wide though so 23c became 25c at optimal air pressures. And latex tube even make it more large up to a little mm.
I ride with 5c tires with no chain and no handlebars. Love it ♥️
Lightweight. I ride 3c with no saddle or cranks.
i dont ride to ensure im on the lightest bike humanly possible
Haha, you guys are using tyres? I use fruit by the foot on my bike!
fruit by the foot? rookie. If your not using crunchy jiff as assembly lube you’re definitely doing it wrong.
Pathetic
I put banana peels on my shoes and skate my way around town
I took my Hard tail Mtb for a spin yesterday, right after my fixed. The difference is insane. The transition between these two feels exactly the same as from a regular Mtb to a fat bike 😂. But also I really really REALLY enjoyed coasting on it and just riding over anything without really feeling it compared to the fixed gear where you feel anything you roll over. Even ants.
Even ants! 🤣 At least we can't feel bacteria when we roll over them. Give a fixie SOME credit lmao!
Go up a tyre size
@@thepedlad7946 already did that. Didn't know what tires size I can ride on my 400 Euro Unknown SC-1 before, but after improving the fork (getting rid of some ugly welding spots that stuck out) I was able to go up from the stock 23c's to 28c's and now I even got a new fork in the mail so Im going to pump it up to 32c's. But that's going to be it. Can't get bigger in the rear. I'm already at the rear end of the dropouts.
@@Messerjocke90 Hey man, I'm currently contemplating whether to get an Unknown SC-1, what's your experience with it?
I switch my 25c tires to 35c and at first I thought the 35c were going to be sluggish. Couldn’t be more wrong, not only could I ride faster with the 35c and more comfortably, but best part is my back and neck doesn’t ache anymore after a ride.
@Raphael Gallo still the same rims. As switching from a 23c to a 35c unsure, but according to my research, your rim should be able to handle a 28c tire.
@Raphael Gallo I'm running 32 c on a 20mm wide rim and it's totally fine
@Raphael Gallo i ride 40s on a set of 16mm rims. You will be fine with 35 for sure! Don't settle with anything less and maybe don't go any bigger to stay safe in the corners
Guy at 8:35 *stops pedaling*
Me: Wait, thats illegal
Where?
He has coaster hub
25c front and rear for the win in my opinion!
Although, depending on the build, 28c looks great. I personally like the bumpy ride and the response of feeling everything.
I know you mostly cover fixed gear stuff but I ride a steel frame road bike bianchi from the 90s and I love your channel Zach. I use 32s and I love them they feel the perfect happy medium between wide and skinny. They are very comfortable and my bike is a blast to ride
Love my 35 -38c tires......won't ever switch to skinny. Thick tires for the win.
Singlespeed=23mm, touring bike=28mm, small wheel folder (Brompton)=32mm and I enjoy all of them !! xxxxx
28c and 32c have always been my favorite
Do they still work well in Hilly areas?
I think my city all-rounder fixie tyre is Continental SuperSport, 28. I love them. They are so smooth, got the grip, and city-fast. And puncture protected.
I never knew how sophisticated riding has become. I'm 67. This was a real helpful vid. Thanks ZG.
Finally an awesome content about tire width
Bike came with 23's and got a 25 for the rear after too many punctures. Rode like that for 2 years but it was a pain to avoid cracks, bumps and rough streets. Yes, they are responsive, but too much for my taste. 3 days ago I got a pair of Conti Ultra Sport 28's and I'm riding in heaven, the comfort is unmatched and I can enjoy the ride more. Yes, they provide more momentum, and that translates into slower launches but easier speed. I very seldom skid so I hope they'd last me for a good time.
-A
I'm currently on 28 c gatorskin in the front and Randonneur 28 c in the back for maximum fixie points. Randos are cheap, durable plus the red stripe is a badge of honor.
Great video!
By the way, the road buzz you feel with skinny tires might feel fast, but is actually slowing you down.
the thing I learnt from this video is that 30 mm is the ideal option for the one-size-fits-almost-all! WTB Exposure!
Or the Continental 5000 in size 32mm
Really great overview. Just picked up fixed gear cycling again after move to Vallejo, and got two front tire flats two days in a row. Started boning up on tires. Good luck in Taipei, thanks for this great video.
700C x 28.
Moving from road 25C to gravel-ish 28C as we have loads of good, crushed stone/ gravel trails around Chicagoland. Excited to try them out. Thanks for the helpful pros and cons!
I have a cheap 90's mountian bike converted to 6 bolt fixed gear. It has 26" X 1 1/8" . Sometimes I put on the 26" X 2 1/4". Love that thing!
Zach i learn so much from your channel. I appreciate what you're doing buddy. All the best many thanks
I've been running 28c Panaracer Pasela PTs on my Fuji Feather (the biggest tires I can get on the bike), and I love them. They handle the limited amount of dirt I hit on my rides just fine. I've got 23c Grand Prix 4000 on my road bike, and those are great, but I'm gonna upgrade them to 25c some day. I've never been a fan of Gatroskins, though. My brother has those on his road bike and I just never liked how they felt.
I have been running Panaracer Pasela Pro Tites in a 35c for the past few months and I love them so far.
sidewall wear and damage come from riding with under pressured tires. tire pressure checks and maintaining correct pressure is key!!! great videos!!!
I run a 32 rear and a 28 front. Turning in NYC is a breeze. Thanks for this info Z its gonna help on my next build. Ride reasonably dangerous!
I run 48cm Rene Herse Ultralight tires on my Crust Lightning Bolt single speed. Love that they work great on dirt as well as bad pavement, and they give a supple and comfortable ride.
I decided to go for a Surly Steamroller as it allowed me to install up to 700X38c tyres for my single speed build.
Never really liked 25c tires, not a fan of stiff rides 28c usually always my go to, but I can't go wrong putting on some nice 35c one in a while👍🏽
Years ago, I bought a used Trek 500 series that had 23s. I pop them the first time I wrote over the railroad tracks going into Old Sacramento. I replace those with 32 cyclocross tires and they work a lot better. Thanks for the video. And thanks for the my Sacramento memories.
also when we getting a Hotline: Zach video
that would be an amazing collab
Definitely need a hotline video with Zach
Lol would be a tepidline
@BeboSaab You're an idiot. It's only okay to ride fast if you fight people? Get help.
BeboSaab youre annoying.
Don't forget you can always get a long caliper brake and go 650b on most fixie frames. Thanks Sheldon
My favorite tire is Maxxis Refuse!
I've ridden 28mm for a couple of years until Continental came out with the Grand Prix 5000 32mm. These are plush in comparison to 28mm's and the compound is very very fast. They are extremely grippy and climbing with them is a revelation. They just fly up hills, likely due to the extra width providing extra surface to drive off of. The rolling resistance of the 32mm is only a half watt more than the 28 which is the quickest. However they are actually faster at pressures below 80psi which is where I ride them at. Never below 60 and usually 75 psi is the sweet spot. In fact the 32 mm GP 5000's are faster than the 25mm GP 4000s II's at the same pressures and at every pressure. The 4000s II's which are amongst the fastest you can buy and were until recently in the top ten fastest tires (have now dropped below the top 15). Now the 5000's are in the top 5 fastest and the 32mm's are in the top ten with added comfort with way more protection given the extra rubber and width. Deflection is ridiculously low with low vibration.
(Zach by the way, is speaking about deflection wrong I believe. High deflection is bad causing the tire to skip over surface irregularities, causing vibration and less grip and actually causes higher rolling resistance as each skid causes increased resistance. Low deflection is better. Zach just had it in reverse but what otherwise said was accurate.)
Anyways I highly recommend the Continental GP 5000 in 28 or 32mm. I prefer the 32s. Much more comfortable, just as fast. I've put over 4000 miles on them so far and haven't had a flat yet and have only needed to pick out one piece of glass so far. I only have 1500 miles on the 28mm but it is much the same though they are less durable and seem to be wearing slightly faster. The 32's have no cuts very few abbrassions and I'd say are highly durable, again with not one flat. I have ridden them through in the dirt on medium trails on my single speed (I rarely ride fixed now, Single speed is faster. It just is). I've been through many sketchy roadways with lots of glass and metal pieces lying around everywhere and no problems. Again I highly recommend them.
700x35 Panaracer Gravelking SS on my TrackloCross. GP5000 in 700x28 on my track bikes for full on speed. 28 front & 32 Gatorskin on my fixed steel commuter. 25 front & 28 back VITTORIA CORSA G 2.0 for my Crit Machine.
Ive ridden 700c 23-25 mm for years. I recently bought a cheap mountain bike with 26 wheels and fat tires. I was surprised by how much more distance fat tires take up per peddle vs skinny tires.
2:58 squirrel chase in the background!
i love my 23s i love harsh rides, riding on bigger tires makes me feel like im always having a flat tire
Fr tho i always gotta look if my tire is flat on 28’s 😂
23c tires in the front 25c tires in the back
i’m running 32c because i’m a bit of a heftier rider. i feel like when i hop off a curb with anything smaller the tire is gonna pop lol. in fact, speaking from personal experience
I think the other way around I have 23s and I constantly worry about the inner tube more than I do on a wider wheel bike lol
@@sour3000 its not that i dont worry about getting a flat i do but the ''hardness'' for me its like tire its ok and softy bigger ones i feel weird my mind its just used to harsh rides
Sacramentos riding is amazing, riding from sac to davis is awesome and the roads have been improved a lot!
The Surly Steamroller is an excellent choice for wide tire clearance. It has more of a road bike geometry though.
Newer version of Continental 4000 is the 5000, though there was an in-between version called the 4000RS (sometimes discounted). You can get these up to 28mm wide.
Wide. Saved you 11 minutes.
give this man a cookie ;ddd
28c is the good spot for me now. I think I can push up to 32c but more than that I will have clearance issue (old peugeot frame from the 80s)
HEY! i have a pugeot US express and run 32s on it and absolutely love them. glad to see another steel pugeot roaming around!
@@rockjunkie1699 There a LOADS of them in France
I run 650b x 47 WTB Horizons, tubeless, on my Surly Steamroller, and it's incredible! I can ride anywhere, they are super smooth, and the grip is unmatched. Highly recommend 650b conversions for fixed gears, so you can max out the tire size.
Hey Jordan! I am planning a bike build similar to what you describe and am struggling to find a 650b fixed wheel set. I am thinking of building them myself but it would be my first and am still looking for options. Did your Steamroller come with wheels or did you make them custom?
@@porelbarranco I had them built up by a shop. Used Origin 8 track hubs and Dt Swiss xm401 rims.
I will tell you on my road bike I road 19mm 25mm and 28 mm tires and found 28mm the best
On my other bike I road between 1.5 inches to 2 inches
No there not fixed gears but I can tell you I one hundred percent agree with this video
It makes 100% sense these pros and cons
God the fixed gears look great I wish my local shops had fixed gears
I am currently getting Michelin Protek Max in 28cs right now, it's gonna be comfortable ride! Let's not forget the mention of my gear ratio, which is is 44/16! Spinning is winning.
Got 33c gravel kings on my Fuji declaration build and they are so awesome in the snow
Wabi lookin hella sick with that steer tube chopped down!
My worst crash was also a RR track. The tire got swallowed up, and off I went. Fractured pelvis (which really hurts, BTW); cracked rib, broken wrist. Interestingly, though, I did learn that if you are lying in the road at 5:45 am in Germantown, TN, cars will drive around you.
But I was riding a wide tire. That was a pretty big gap - and the track crosses the road at an odd angle. Many riders have fallen there.
I rode this gnarly dirt trail with my 32c Gator skins and those bad boys took it like champs, great tires.
The squirrels in the trees are the best :D
My feather came with vittoria zafiro on 25. I switched up to gatorskins on 28 (because i saw it on a flashy yellow bike).I feel enough difference since i ride on these wider tires improving comfort. I got a hard punch in the back wheel and the tire now feels bumpy, is like ride on bad pavement but is my tire (not my rim).
I've never even seriously considered going fixed gear, but I love your videos. My road bike has 42s and my mountain bikes always have 3in, but still love the content.
I have a constantine drag fixie and I had 23c tires at first and changed to 28c tires and I love riding the 28c tires. Planning to build a tracklocross in the future
I use 32mm wide tubeless on my commuter bike, this the ideal performance/speed/puncture resistance combo for me.
The Grand Prix 4K have no protection and typically run wider than similar sized Gatorskins. Just an FYI to potential purchasers. I have 3T fork that maxes at 25c, I can fit 28c Gatorskins in there with minimal rub, while the 28c Grand Prix 4K rub a lot. It may have to do with the stiffness of the Gatorskins, but I prefer them for the protection.
grand prix 4000s tends to run wider. might be due to e suppleness of the tyre like u said.
I run a 28 in the front and 25 in the rear. Easy skids and a less twitchy front end
23c-25 has a less contact from the tire to the pavement. Wider tires like 28c-38c has a higher contact of tire to the pavement which is why you can feel slow on a wide tire than a skinny one
you got hella weak legs bro
anyone else noticed those squirrels chasing each other on the background at 2.58? XD
Who spotted the squirrels in the back at 2:56?
actually you can ride gravel on 23, I've done a 90km mostly gravel ride on my old 23s. But yeah they're not great.
But did you like it??
@@TheFriendofnight it was fine at the time bc I didn't know any better
Haha same it "works"
Hey you’re the man that biked across florida on a walmart bike.
@@noonehere4332 haha yeah
Greetings from Central America, Guatemala City.
I can't wait for this video. I'm currently running 23c thickslicks on the front(looks 25c inflated) and 25c gatorskins on the back. I'm thinking of running with 30c on the front and back but I don't know if my colossi Mondial track can accommodate those tires.
28 back 25 front religion
Yeah, that's pretty solid setup.
For the price of the higher end Wabi framesets, you could get a custom Chinese titanium frameset from Waltly or Titan. Or you could opt for the custom titanium frame and a carbon fork from Aliexpress. Point is you can go nuts with whatever dimensions you want, add a tapered head tube, T47 bottom bracket, zero toe overlap even with a midfoot position and 60 mm tires.
@BeboSaab I don't, but I do have a custom titanium allroad bike and hardtail mountain bike. They're pretty great, I used the free version of Bikecad to get the geometry, they use that to make you detailed drawings for manufacturing. It takes from a few to several iterations till you can give them the go ahead to begin making the frame[set]. I got the allroad frameset for 1150 USD shipped and the mtb frame for 930 USD shipped, although I would recommend just getting an Aliexpress carbon fork and use that for the geometry of the frame instead of paying more for a custom fork. It ain't cheap but it's not a bad price if you compare it to getting a local custom frame. You do have to make sure that you know what you want and to thoroughly check the drawings they give you, because they'll make whatever is on there even if it's a bad idea. Their English is quite acceptable.
www.spanner.org.uk/ This is a blog about custom Chinese titanium frames, the guy offers guidance for a price. But that's not necessary, the blog does have useful information. I didn't know of the blog till after I got the first bike.
Watching this from Sacramento
its not just about the tyre width but also the tread thickness. some tyres are simply thicker than others. most race tyres are super thin and arent meant to be ridden for months on end. there are some good 28/32 tyres with proper thickness that offer a good mix of both. the only problem i ever have is the profile. the profile can cost you alot of rolling resistance but is fundamental in wet conditions. so the real question is wet vs dry and how much air pressure depending on what kind of surface you plan on riding.
The train tracks got me with 29x2.2s!!
My go to for tires fg are 25mm Schwalbe Marathon Plus because I hate flats. Got them anyway. So, I switched to 28mm and haven't had a flat since 2008 on my fg.
I'm currently using 32mm Bontrager tyres on my old framed single speed that I'm work with as a delivery guy and also commute everywhere with, and I really would want to use 28, or even 25mm tyres, but roads in my city are in really bad quality, the old town is filled with historic cobblestone and I'm scared it wouldn't give me any real benefits since I'm alredy scared to go in bigger speed throught bumps and pothols.
I consider trying 30mm tyres, as many modern fixed framesets allow this size as biggest possible, but I'm also thinking about changing it to more comfortable 35mm tyres possibly with some tread on sides, since I have room for them and my machine alredy isn't the fastest.
Ach, problems, I probably should just try both sizes.
I have narrow wheels (622x14), even 32mm look on them like a light bulb, so I'm not sure about getting even wider tyres, they wouldn't settle goodly on such slim rims. When I change rims the next gonna be wider, so i'll consider getting 35mm tyres.
I'm not really the super strong cyclist, even when working I only cycle for about 7 hours a day and on 2.69 (43x16) gear ratio, so easier ride and benefit from narrower tyres gonna be appreciated.
I'm thinking about wider rims but also 30mm tyres; supposedly wide rims give more comfort and cussioning.
40x18 is only 2.22 ratio, that's super low for my taste, you're not annoyed from getting feeling of owerpedaling? I'll consider something less than 2.40 only for MTB or commuting in super hilly town.
I always fit the fattest tire I can. The tiny amount of rolling resistance and increase weight for me is negligible compared to all the benefits of wider tires.
@BeboSaab When does it start to increase again? 35x622 or 37x700c might be too big.
Larger tires have less rolling resistance at the same pressure. Rated pressure for 28’s is 85-95. 25’s are 115-125. 28’s and bigger have a lot of rolling resistance lower than 100psi. 25c is the fastest tire and isn’t a “dying size” at all.
i liked the squirells at 2:56
After 150k km and any types of riding and dozens of different king of bike i may say... The best tire is changing all the time depending on your surface conditions, your skill and what want to do. There is no single 'one' tire. But high end class tires always feels good, nothing but the best is needed.
You can ride over anything on Schwalbe Marathon tyres! That's why you didn't puncture. They're pretty heavy though.
Wish my thickslicks would wear out so I could have a reason to buy a pair of 32mm Gatorskinz.
Is there an easy way to check how wide a tire your bike can fit? For example measure the distance between your rear seat stays and minus 10mm for clearance. Or measure the space available inside the front rim to the bottom of the brake caliper. Its a generic track frame with horizontal dropouts. I have 23mm on the bike with a bunch of space possibly for 32mm or 36mm. I would like to be able to ride on a bumpy paved bike trail with a 2 mile gravel causeway on one end. Overall it would turn a dull heavy frame into a solid comfortable 4 season bike.
How do Thick Slicks do in Rain/slushy weather?
I would just say go to your local bike store or even more preferably a co-op with your bike and ask them to let you try a different size to see how big you can fit. Every coop I’ve ever been to has been super cool about letting people borrow tools and fix things yourself so you probably shouldn’t have an issue. Especially if your going to actually buy one.
Trying to build up a fixed 26er! Tires will be about 2 inches wide. Basically a monster track bike!
42c gang
Hi! Thank you for this information. You are exactly what I was looking for. I have a fixie, used to ride in the city. Move to the woods, road are gravel and I made a trail around the property. Gravel, wood sticks, acorns everywhere, I figure to retire the fixie since I never knew I could change the tire. Excuse my ignorance, this bike was a gift a while back to go group city bike rides. I have no idea yet, about where to measure to find a non skinny tire for my bike. I’d appreciate if you or anyone with experience would be so kind to help me. I want to ride my fixie on the trail. Thank you. ☺️
Great video! Keep it up!
Running 32c 4seasons black on my geared bike and 28c ultra sports ..pretty fast, and besides popping them bunny hopping nearly never get a flat. Medium is the best imho.
The Trick to stopping flats with skinny tires is TUFFY liners- I ride 700 x 16c. Fast as hell but You feel EVERY CRACK especially when you use clipless(Those metal plates in the shoes) feel the road like nothing else.
That resistance against sharp object damage that Schwalbe Marathons have comes from 5 to 7 mm extra rubber thickness and not from extra width. So called "Unflatable Technology". Primitive but effective. Thick tyre with thin rubber will puncture as easily as anything.
wait what 25 is skinny now? :)
Been skinny get wit the new era :p
always has been
To me compound is more important then width, not many 23,s actually measure 23 once mounted, for a commuter tire it’s hard to beat the specialized turbo 26x700 they are almost impossible to flatten, got over 3000 miles on 2 dif sets zero flats so far, panaracer pasella is a hard tire to beat if your on a budget they roll nice grip decent and are puncture proof, have tryed almost all the tires on the market, there is only 2 brands that I use conti and specialized rubber, Victoria makes a decent product as well Rubino is decent for the price
didn't know you rode in Sacramento. I live and ride in sactown all day, from Elk Grove to Folsom!
Skidding on them regularly for a year and a half?? How 😂 I don’t skid that often and they last me like 2 months
Rotate them so you’re not always skidding on the same spot. Or change your gearing
Do you skid in the saddle or standing up. Skidding in the saddle can destroy your rear tire quickly if you are a bigger rider.
I've been riding brakeless on the same set of Vittoria Randonneurs for a year and a half, the set before that lasted me almost 3 years
Aww the squirrels at 2:55 behind you
I reccomend wide. My skinny tires always pops
Yes! Mines too. I'm kinda tired of wasting money on buying new ones.
I've ridden 28's on gravel and would not recommend it. I never felt closer to death than bombing down that tiny little hill.
Surly steamroller*** i love my bike. My only complaints are that it doesn't have canti mounts or rack mounts. I have a ss/fixed crosscheck as well but its way slower handling. I may throw on some wide risers to the crosscheck because it may just be that im running drops
35 Explore UFH in winter, 25 Conti GT's when it's nice, both on my Cinelli mash, plenty of clearance
23c in the front and 28c in the back, both gatorskins. Riser bar for better control.
spaceghost 25c rear, planning to change 28c.. need to change rims too?
2:57 yall watch the chasing squirels at background :Dd
I'm kinda sick of punctures on my 25c. And i'm looking forward to get a 32c. I assume those should be more protective against little rocks and stuff. Am i right?
Yes
lucky i can fit 32's on the big block. got 2 wheel sets; Deep V's for the skrrrrt, Suns for the dirt.
Great video Zach,
anyway you can post the link to where I can find the front basket. Thanks man!
On my throne,mataro,and mataro low I have 700x28 gators skins on my beer run 6ku I got 700×30 feels like a tank compare to my tracks
That’s because the 6ku is a STEEL frame. Also put some GP5000 in 700x28 instead of the GS and you will FLY.
10:45 xc MTB + WTB Thickslicks 👍
respect for the most down-to-earth youtouber )
I have the way opposite. I find 23c is more comforts than 25c, call me crazy but I am serious. I try to use every possible air pressures, can't get 25c right on spots.
My rim is 18-19c internal wide though so 23c became 25c at optimal air pressures. And latex tube even make it more large up to a little mm.