Best tyres for commuting?
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby yugyug » Wed Jan 28, 2015 11:22 pm
- ItsDank
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby ItsDank » Fri Jan 30, 2015 12:31 pm
Not quite, there's a reason that golf balls for example have bumps, it's to reduce the turbulence and drag created from smooth surfaces. The same applies to some of the bumps you see on Zipp rims and of course, this applies to tires as well.yugyug wrote:Jeez... Aero effect of tread... That's really pushing it!!
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Best tyres for commuting?
Postby yugyug » Fri Jan 30, 2015 7:16 pm
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby __PG__ » Fri Jan 30, 2015 7:47 pm
Golf balls are dimpled to cause the boundary layer to become turbulent. A turbulent boundary layer has more momentun and thus is less susceptible to separate in an adverse pressure gradient.ItsDank wrote:Not quite, there's a reason that golf balls for example have bumps, it's to reduce the turbulence and drag created from smooth surfaces. The same applies to some of the bumps you see on Zipp rims and of course, this applies to tires as well.yugyug wrote:Jeez... Aero effect of tread... That's really pushing it!!
Smooth surfaces by themselves create less skin friction drag than a rough/dimpled surface. A laminar boundary layer causes less drag than a turbulent one.
However, a laminar one is more likely to separate when moving into an adverse pressure gradient thus it will create a larger wake, and hence more pressure drag.
The dimples on Zipp rims are probably cosmetic. The dimples on the front of some of the TT helmets I see definitely are.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby RonK » Fri Jan 30, 2015 8:50 pm
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby ItsDank » Sat Jan 31, 2015 12:07 am
Funny enough, Zipps own marketing materials go on at length about their windtunnel figures and the primary example,a golf ball creating a turbulent layer whilst rotating.__PG__ wrote:Golf balls are dimpled to cause the boundary layer to become turbulent. A turbulent boundary layer has more momentun and thus is less susceptible to separate in an adverse pressure gradient.ItsDank wrote:Not quite, there's a reason that golf balls for example have bumps, it's to reduce the turbulence and drag created from smooth surfaces. The same applies to some of the bumps you see on Zipp rims and of course, this applies to tires as well.yugyug wrote:Jeez... Aero effect of tread... That's really pushing it!!
Smooth surfaces by themselves create less skin friction drag than a rough/dimpled surface. A laminar boundary layer causes less drag than a turbulent one.
However, a laminar one is more likely to separate when moving into an adverse pressure gradient thus it will create a larger wake, and hence more pressure drag.
The dimples on Zipp rims are probably cosmetic. The dimples on the front of some of the TT helmets I see definitely are.
http://www.zipp.com/_media/pdfs/technol ... _edges.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
In any case, the graphs on the page previous show reductions in drag but the tire design wasn't based on providing these results (but it does anyhow).
I've done many km's in the rain with the Grip 4 SC's and they give you plenty of confidence in the wet. With my Vittoria Evo CX's I would skid upon wet braking and powering out of the saddle was out far too risky but this hasn't been the case with the Michelin's. With the Grip SC's I can get out of the saddle and power at high cadence without slipping in the wet, it's great If there's a lighter option that provides more grip than I'm all for trying it out. As a commuter tire, it's impressed so far.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby __PG__ » Sat Jan 31, 2015 4:01 pm
I'll read it again, but it seems that the ZIpp 'dimples' are not being used in the sense that golf balls are dimpled. Otherwise, you wouldn't use them on disc wheel. They seem to be able to lower skin friction drag by using dimples.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Sat Jan 31, 2015 4:44 pm
Zipp have dimples on their 404 and the similar depth swissside hadron has apparently less drag without using them.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby ItsDank » Mon Feb 02, 2015 5:42 pm
A review I've done on the Michelin Pro 4 SC Grip
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Wed Mar 18, 2015 12:24 pm
Rear 25c randonneur after just 1788.5km
Wont be using them again. Rolls ok, similar to marathon green guard and better than the marathon plus, but not cheap and doesn't last. Has had good puncture resistance though. I'm going to try a 25c durano plus on the rear next. The front one has seen out 3 rear tyres now.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby jasonc » Wed Mar 18, 2015 12:54 pm
warthog1 wrote:Rear 25c randonneur after just 1788.5km
that post was from 12 months ago.jasonc wrote:warthog1 wrote:Was the tread worn out after 2635 kms ? If so were you locking the rear wheel regularly?jasonc wrote:
I have the spreadsheet number of the tyre mileage that I can show if you like. here's a glimpse:
first randonneur - 2635kms
first marathon plus ~8200kms.
is there any point in discussing it?
I get more out of a GP4000S.
I get more out of a GP4000s also. No locking. They are just crap.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Wed Mar 18, 2015 2:31 pm
I got somewhere around 4k from my smp, I didn't record all my rides so guessing a bit and it did die prematurely from a sidewall cut. They ride like a lump of leather IMO.
Far more duarble than a randonneur, tread wear wise however.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby tez001 » Wed Mar 18, 2015 6:25 pm
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby rangersac » Thu Mar 19, 2015 3:22 pm
You won't on the rear, I've tried and they died pretty quickly. A nicer ride than SMPs and grippier in the wet was my impression, so I left one on the front, but am back to running an SMP on the rear.tez001 wrote:I got some 25mm radonneurs which I'll be putting onto the commuter next. Hope I get more than 1800kms out of them though. The current Rubinos have done 2300km and are nearing on replacement, and I thought that was bad.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Thu Mar 19, 2015 3:49 pm
https://www.torpedo7.com.au/products/01 ... -700-x-25c
I don't expect it to be the best commuter tire but it went with some chainrings I bought for the roadie and stayed under $100-
I'll see how it goes wear wise anyway.
Edit;
They don't review well
http://www.roadbikereview.com/cat/wheel ... 89crx.aspx
http://bikesmarts.com/the-20-road-tire- ... a-zaffiro/
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby familyguy » Fri Mar 20, 2015 10:35 am
Have used the Zaffiro they put it up against in the last review with good success. Only throwing tyres out when they squared off on the rear tread, not because of cuts. Lugano should be OK for $20.warthog1 wrote:Moneys tight at the moment so I went cheap.
https://www.torpedo7.com.au/products/01 ... -700-x-25c
I don't expect it to be the best commuter tire but it went with some chainrings I bought for the roadie and stayed under $100-
I'll see how it goes wear wise anyway.
Edit;
They don't review well
http://www.roadbikereview.com/cat/wheel ... 89crx.aspx
http://bikesmarts.com/the-20-road-tire- ... a-zaffiro/
Jim
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby PatNZ » Sat Mar 21, 2015 3:24 pm
Im really surprised the Randonneurs wore out that fast. I was thinking of them when I got my previous gator skins. I thought they would last longer since they are the heavier more touring style tyre. At least I know to avoid it now.jasonc wrote:warthog1 wrote:Rear 25c randonneur after just 1788.5km
I got around 6000kms out of my rear gatorskin. Its hard to tell exactly since last year I wasn't keeping and exact log of my Kms like I am this year.
I'm testing MP4 Endurance tyres now, with logged milage. So it should be interesting.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Sun Mar 22, 2015 4:19 pm
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby fatherofmany » Mon Mar 23, 2015 10:19 am
Pleased to say that after 8 months and over 3500km commuting, including one of the worst debris ridden roads on the Central Coast (Manns Rd for anyone that knows it) I wore the rear down to the kevlar and replaced it. Considering I ride past a car wreckers and multiple garden supplies and metal recyclers, no incidents at all with them and very chuffed. The tyre was chopped to bits but no glass got past the kevlar.
However.. 2 weeks after I swapped it out I made it to within 200m of work and suffered a flat on the new rear tyre. the cause.. the tiniest, thinnest piece of wire, about 1cm long got through the weave where all the glass couldn't.
They are on my other ride too - the weekender - and no flats there either. I think they have a nicer road feel than the Specialized Roubaix or the Armadillos.
Because they are a flat packed tyre, the fitting of them when new can be a bit tricky as they don't want to readily conform to their new round shape. I think they are worth the effort though, as I found out later that once they've been on for a while, they are easy enough to replace tubes in if you ever find the need.
FoM
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby singlespeedscott » Mon Mar 23, 2015 8:54 pm
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby Thoglette » Tue Mar 24, 2015 10:07 am
Pretty similar to mine - one puncture in the time it took to get to the kevlar, (very fine piece of glass) similar industrial estate routes. Grip is average but ok. Mine were wired so no issues with roundnessfatherofmany wrote:My experience so far on Maxxis Re-Fuse 700C 25mm.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby poohkies » Tue Mar 24, 2015 10:16 am
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby kb » Tue Mar 24, 2015 10:53 am
And it's a bugger to get out of the puncture resistant belt. A couple of those had me buying a mini Gerber folding pliers for my saddle bag.singlespeedscott wrote:Few tyres will stop the old radial tyre wire.
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Re: Best tyres for commuting?
Postby warthog1 » Thu Mar 26, 2015 1:10 pm
Famous last words but I am done with leather tyres. The bike feels so much more lively without a thick heavy rear tyre on. The heavier/thicker the tyre, the more it sucks the life out of the ride. I think I'm with SSScott here,
singlespeedscott wrote:life is too short to ride heavy tyres
I reckon a durano plus is as thick as I'll go in future.
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