• Tire pressure

    From Mark J cleary@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 7 14:38:18 2025
    I am going to Conti GP 5000 32mm clincher tires. I weight 170 pounds and
    the bike and the stuff lets just say 25 pounds. Standard Shimano disk
    rims RS171 is the wheels. According to the various on line calculators
    they suggest I use a tire pressure of 62 rear and 60 front. A few put
    them up to 68psi in the rear.

    To me this is drastically lower than what I am using on the 28's. I
    might have the 28's drop to around 75 front and 80 rear before I
    reinflate but I am surprised. Maybe I am just way off the mark and
    putting in to high psi. What would you experts say. Naturally the 32's
    are going to be less but maybe now even on the 28's I am running to
    much. I usually get the rear up to around 90 and front 80 and then let
    them ride lower for maybe a week or so depends. But 62 is way down the
    line.
    --
    Deacon Mark

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  • From Roger Merriman@21:1/5 to Mark J cleary on Mon Apr 7 22:20:06 2025
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    I am going to Conti GP 5000 32mm clincher tires. I weight 170 pounds and
    the bike and the stuff lets just say 25 pounds. Standard Shimano disk
    rims RS171 is the wheels. According to the various on line calculators
    they suggest I use a tire pressure of 62 rear and 60 front. A few put
    them up to 68psi in the rear.

    To me this is drastically lower than what I am using on the 28's. I
    might have the 28's drop to around 75 front and 80 rear before I
    reinflate but I am surprised. Maybe I am just way off the mark and
    putting in to high psi. What would you experts say. Naturally the 32's
    are going to be less but maybe now even on the 28's I am running to
    much. I usually get the rear up to around 90 and front 80 and then let
    them ride lower for maybe a week or so depends. But 62 is way down the
    line.

    My “old school roadie” that I use for the commute, I run with a bit of extra air in them, at 80psi with the 32mm tyres, I’m 200+ lb let alone bike and pannier and kit!

    60ish sounds about right really, thought these things are guides.

    Note that brains aren’t very good at speed, squishy = slow and hard = fast
    to the monkey brain! I’ve had to retrain the monkey over time, as I
    certainly used to be 120ish

    Roger Merriman

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  • From Mark J cleary@21:1/5 to Roger Merriman on Wed Apr 9 15:58:11 2025
    On 4/7/2025 5:20 PM, Roger Merriman wrote:
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    I am going to Conti GP 5000 32mm clincher tires. I weight 170 pounds and
    the bike and the stuff lets just say 25 pounds. Standard Shimano disk
    rims RS171 is the wheels. According to the various on line calculators
    they suggest I use a tire pressure of 62 rear and 60 front. A few put
    them up to 68psi in the rear.

    To me this is drastically lower than what I am using on the 28's. I
    might have the 28's drop to around 75 front and 80 rear before I
    reinflate but I am surprised. Maybe I am just way off the mark and
    putting in to high psi. What would you experts say. Naturally the 32's
    are going to be less but maybe now even on the 28's I am running to
    much. I usually get the rear up to around 90 and front 80 and then let
    them ride lower for maybe a week or so depends. But 62 is way down the
    line.

    My “old school roadie” that I use for the commute, I run with a bit of extra air in them, at 80psi with the 32mm tyres, I’m 200+ lb let alone bike and pannier and kit!

    60ish sounds about right really, thought these things are guides.

    Note that brains aren’t very good at speed, squishy = slow and hard = fast to the monkey brain! I’ve had to retrain the monkey over time, as I certainly used to be 120ish

    Roger Merriman
    I put the new Conti's on today and they measure out a 31mm I am
    surprised maybe the will change as I ride them. Hopefully can ride
    tomorrow.

    --
    Deacon Mark

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  • From Roger Merriman@21:1/5 to Mark J cleary on Thu Apr 10 09:22:14 2025
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    On 4/7/2025 5:20 PM, Roger Merriman wrote:
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    I am going to Conti GP 5000 32mm clincher tires. I weight 170 pounds and >>> the bike and the stuff lets just say 25 pounds. Standard Shimano disk
    rims RS171 is the wheels. According to the various on line calculators
    they suggest I use a tire pressure of 62 rear and 60 front. A few put
    them up to 68psi in the rear.

    To me this is drastically lower than what I am using on the 28's. I
    might have the 28's drop to around 75 front and 80 rear before I
    reinflate but I am surprised. Maybe I am just way off the mark and
    putting in to high psi. What would you experts say. Naturally the 32's
    are going to be less but maybe now even on the 28's I am running to
    much. I usually get the rear up to around 90 and front 80 and then let
    them ride lower for maybe a week or so depends. But 62 is way down the
    line.

    My “old school roadie” that I use for the commute, I run with a bit of >> extra air in them, at 80psi with the 32mm tyres, I’m 200+ lb let alone bike
    and pannier and kit!

    60ish sounds about right really, thought these things are guides.

    Note that brains aren’t very good at speed, squishy = slow and hard = fast >> to the monkey brain! I’ve had to retrain the monkey over time, as I
    certainly used to be 120ish

    Roger Merriman
    I put the new Conti's on today and they measure out a 31mm I am
    surprised maybe the will change as I ride them. Hopefully can ride
    tomorrow.

    What’s your wheels internal rim width that will have an effect, my MTB new wheelset is purposely on the narrow side for modern wheels as otherwise it would cause clearance issues for the MTB, with 30mm internal rim vs 25mm

    22/23mm for road bikes seems to be about normal nowadays.

    Roger Merriman

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  • From Mark J cleary@21:1/5 to Roger Merriman on Thu Apr 10 10:35:36 2025
    On 4/10/2025 4:22 AM, Roger Merriman wrote:
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    On 4/7/2025 5:20 PM, Roger Merriman wrote:
    Mark J cleary <mcleary08@comcast.net> wrote:
    I am going to Conti GP 5000 32mm clincher tires. I weight 170 pounds and >>>> the bike and the stuff lets just say 25 pounds. Standard Shimano disk >>>> rims RS171 is the wheels. According to the various on line calculators >>>> they suggest I use a tire pressure of 62 rear and 60 front. A few put
    them up to 68psi in the rear.

    To me this is drastically lower than what I am using on the 28's. I
    might have the 28's drop to around 75 front and 80 rear before I
    reinflate but I am surprised. Maybe I am just way off the mark and
    putting in to high psi. What would you experts say. Naturally the 32's >>>> are going to be less but maybe now even on the 28's I am running to
    much. I usually get the rear up to around 90 and front 80 and then let >>>> them ride lower for maybe a week or so depends. But 62 is way down the >>>> line.

    My “old school roadie” that I use for the commute, I run with a bit of >>> extra air in them, at 80psi with the 32mm tyres, I’m 200+ lb let alone bike
    and pannier and kit!

    60ish sounds about right really, thought these things are guides.

    Note that brains aren’t very good at speed, squishy = slow and hard = fast
    to the monkey brain! I’ve had to retrain the monkey over time, as I
    certainly used to be 120ish

    Roger Merriman
    I put the new Conti's on today and they measure out a 31mm I am
    surprised maybe the will change as I ride them. Hopefully can ride
    tomorrow.

    What’s your wheels internal rim width that will have an effect, my MTB new wheelset is purposely on the narrow side for modern wheels as otherwise it would cause clearance issues for the MTB, with 30mm internal rim vs 25mm

    22/23mm for road bikes seems to be about normal nowadays.

    Roger Merriman


    My wheel according to Shimano rs171 has 19mm height and width internal
    and 24.6 width external. I just got done with a 50 mile ride and they
    are quite nice and yes much smoother going over the pavement. My speed
    was about my usual.

    --
    Deacon Mark

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