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The price of lightweight balloons



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 8th 09, 05:18 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Andre Jute[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,422
Default The price of lightweight balloons

When even a puttering randonneur gets up into the big bikes and the
big balloon tyres, he suddenly acquires something in common with the
leanest roadie on the skinniest tyres: he becomes a weigh weenie. For
instance, in the biggest size, 50-622, going from the 995gr Big Apple
to the 790g Big Apple Liteskin saves seven and a quarter ounces, or
damn nearly a pound between a pair of tyres.

Someone else will have to say if you lose anything in comfort or
puncture-proofing or durability by going from the standard Big Apple
to the Liteskin. I've only had the Liteskin.

In tubes the weight saving is even more. Going from the 220gr Schwalbe
Type 19 standard tube suitable for Big Apples to the 140gr
lightweight tube Type 19a saves three whole ounces per tube.

Between the lightweight tyres and the lightweight tubes then, one
saves a pound and a quarter per bike (no spares carried! -- nearer a
pound and a half if a single spare tube is carried).

But there is a price. It probably isn't much to a racer who checks the
inflation of his tyres before every ride. But it matters, though
probably not too much, to the utility/recreation biker one finds on
balloons.

It turns out that the extra light tubes are more permeable. They lose
air more quickly. Whereas it is perfectly okay to check the inflation
in a standard Big Apple with the standard Schwalbe T19 tube every
month or even every two months in the certain knowledge that it won't
lose enough air by natural processes to go out of bounds (unless run
on the very lower limit, of course), the lightweight T19A tubed tyre's
inflation must be checked every fortnight, more often if you run them
closer to the lower limit of inflation.

After some experimentation, I have settled at running my Big Apple
Liteskins with the Type 19A lightweight tubes at 2 bar front and rear.
That gives one enough comfort and plenty of control if precision is
required in steering or handling. This is a bit higher than was
initially reported by Lou and also by me: I've gone for the slightly
higher inflation to give me a (perhaps merely psychological) margin of
error against snakebites for the occasional pothole taken at speed
while talking to the pedalpals.

Starting from 2 bar, weather cool and tyres lightly used (only short
fast sections) and thus unlikely ever to be hot for long, the T19A
lightweight Schwalbe tube self-deinflates to 1.9 bar in a fortnight
and 1.8 bar in three weeks. The permissible minimum inflation for the
60-622 Big Apples is 1.5 bar, so this is a pretty fat safety margin if
you let the inflation check go another week or fortnight.

Andre Jute
It's not talent that makes you (fill in whatever you want to be), it
is persistent attention to detail
Ads
  #2  
Old August 8th 09, 05:20 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
jim beam[_5_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 941
Default The price of lightweight contributors

barbara cartland wrote:
one big yawn

**** off andre.
  #3  
Old August 8th 09, 07:53 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
someone
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,340
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On 8 Aug, 17:18, Andre Jute wrote:
When even a puttering randonneur gets up into the big bikes and the
big balloon tyres, he suddenly acquires something in common with the
leanest roadie on the skinniest tyres: he becomes a weigh weenie. For
instance, in the biggest size, 50-622, going from the 995gr Big Apple
to the 790g Big Apple Liteskin saves seven and a quarter ounces, or
damn nearly a pound between a pair of tyres.

Someone else will have to say if you lose anything in comfort or
puncture-proofing or durability by going from the standard Big Apple
to the Liteskin. I've only had the Liteskin.

In tubes the weight saving is even more. Going from the 220gr Schwalbe
Type 19 standard tube suitable for Big Apples to the 140gr
lightweight *tube Type 19a saves three whole ounces per tube.

Between the lightweight tyres and the lightweight tubes then, one
saves a pound and a quarter per bike (no spares carried! -- nearer a
pound and a half if a single spare tube is carried).

But there is a price. It probably isn't much to a racer who checks the
inflation of his tyres before every ride. But it matters, though
probably not too much, to the utility/recreation biker one finds on
balloons.

It turns out that the extra light tubes are more permeable. They lose
air more quickly. Whereas it is perfectly okay to check the inflation
in a standard Big Apple with the standard Schwalbe T19 tube every
month or even every two months in the certain knowledge that it won't
lose enough air by natural processes to go out of bounds (unless run
on the very lower limit, of course), the lightweight T19A tubed tyre's
inflation must be checked every fortnight, more often if you run them
closer to the lower limit of inflation.

After some experimentation, I have settled at running my Big Apple
Liteskins with the Type 19A lightweight tubes at 2 bar front and rear.
That gives one enough comfort and plenty of control if precision is
required in steering or handling. This is a bit higher than was
initially reported by Lou and also by me: I've gone for the slightly
higher inflation to give me a (perhaps merely psychological) margin of
error against snakebites for the occasional pothole taken at speed
while talking to the pedalpals.

Starting from 2 bar, weather cool and tyres lightly used (only short
fast sections) and thus unlikely ever to be hot for long, the T19A
lightweight Schwalbe tube self-deinflates to 1.9 bar in a fortnight
and 1.8 bar in three weeks. The permissible minimum inflation for the
60-622 Big Apples is 1.5 bar, so this is a pretty fat safety margin if
you let the inflation check go another week or fortnight.


If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. Bigger and softer mean more comfort. Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment. Too hard is just too hard,
dont go there. That 1.5 bar will be for a particular rim which you
are probably not using and will be the safe running level at which to
prevent tyre detatchment. Your weight is also a consideration,
apparently 100kgf fits all. So if you adjust your weight to 100kgf
all will be well.
  #4  
Old August 8th 09, 10:34 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Andre Jute[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,422
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On Aug 8, 7:53*pm, someone wrote:
On 8 Aug, 17:18, Andre Jute wrote:





When even a puttering randonneur gets up into the big bikes and the
big balloon tyres, he suddenly acquires something in common with the
leanest roadie on the skinniest tyres: he becomes a weigh weenie. For
instance, in the biggest size, 50-622, going from the 995gr Big Apple
to the 790g Big Apple Liteskin saves seven and a quarter ounces, or
damn nearly a pound between a pair of tyres.


Someone else will have to say if you lose anything in comfort or
puncture-proofing or durability by going from the standard Big Apple
to the Liteskin. I've only had the Liteskin.


In tubes the weight saving is even more. Going from the 220gr Schwalbe
Type 19 standard tube suitable for Big Apples to the 140gr
lightweight *tube Type 19a saves three whole ounces per tube.


Between the lightweight tyres and the lightweight tubes then, one
saves a pound and a quarter per bike (no spares carried! -- nearer a
pound and a half if a single spare tube is carried).


But there is a price. It probably isn't much to a racer who checks the
inflation of his tyres before every ride. But it matters, though
probably not too much, to the utility/recreation biker one finds on
balloons.


It turns out that the extra light tubes are more permeable. They lose
air more quickly. Whereas it is perfectly okay to check the inflation
in a standard Big Apple with the standard Schwalbe T19 tube every
month or even every two months in the certain knowledge that it won't
lose enough air by natural processes to go out of bounds (unless run
on the very lower limit, of course), the lightweight T19A tubed tyre's
inflation must be checked every fortnight, more often if you run them
closer to the lower limit of inflation.


After some experimentation, I have settled at running my Big Apple
Liteskins with the Type 19A lightweight tubes at 2 bar front and rear.
That gives one enough comfort and plenty of control if precision is
required in steering or handling. This is a bit higher than was
initially reported by Lou and also by me: I've gone for the slightly
higher inflation to give me a (perhaps merely psychological) margin of
error against snakebites for the occasional pothole taken at speed
while talking to the pedalpals.


Starting from 2 bar, weather cool and tyres lightly used (only short
fast sections) and thus unlikely ever to be hot for long, the T19A
lightweight Schwalbe tube self-deinflates to 1.9 bar in a fortnight
and 1.8 bar in three weeks. The permissible minimum inflation for the
60-622 Big Apples is 1.5 bar, so this is a pretty fat safety margin if
you let the inflation check go another week or fortnight.


If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *


What does frequency of use have to do with manufacturers'
recommendations, except in maintenance and replacement?

Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment. *Too hard is just too hard,
dont go there. *That 1.5 bar will be for a particular rim which you
are probably not using and will be the safe running level at which to
prevent tyre detatchment. *


I imagine the 60mm balloons are specified at 1.5 bar for the ERTRO
recommendation of IIRC 21mm which was in force when the Big Apples hit
the market. In 2006 ERTRO also condescended to permit tyres up to 62mm
on 19mm rims.

My rims are 25mm between the beads, so in theory at least, I could
reduce inflation pressure below the manufacturer's recommendation of
1.5 bar -- if I were a wiener. However bike and rider weigh in the
order of 115-118kg, so 1.5 bar is probably a sound guess at a minimum,
and for safety 1.6 bar asd a practical minimum. My roads have the
occasional pothole, which I often take at speed, which is why I like
2.0 bar. I did however for a couple of months run the tyres at 1.8
bar, falling to sometimes 1.65 bar before I reinflated, and there were
no adverse effects.

Your weight is also a consideration,
apparently 100kgf fits all. *So if you adjust your weight to 100kgf
all will be well.


I'm not worried about all being well with my tyres and tubes. I've
already laid in spares. If I lose 15-18kg, I'll be so svelte, I'll
have to give up cycling and become a model. You're out of this world,
Trevor. As if anyone would just lose an ungodly amount of weight to
suit the rating on their bicycle tyres...

Andre Jute
Visit Jute on Thisthatandtheother
http://www.audio-talk.co.uk/fiultra/...20ARISING.html
  #5  
Old August 9th 09, 02:05 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
someone
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,340
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On 8 Aug, 22:34, Andre Jute wrote:


If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *


What does frequency of use have to do with manufacturers'
recommendations, except in maintenance and replacement?


"diddly squat", been at the malt again, Andre?


Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment. *Too hard is just too hard,
dont go there. *That 1.5 bar will be for a particular rim which you
are probably not using and will be the safe running level at which to
prevent tyre detatchment. *


I imagine the 60mm balloons are specified at 1.5 bar for the ERTRO
recommendation of IIRC 21mm which was in force when the Big Apples hit
the market. In 2006 ERTRO also condescended to permit tyres up to 62mm
on 19mm rims.


I have noticed your imagination has run an absolute riot recently.


My rims are 25mm between the beads, so in theory at least, I could
reduce inflation pressure below the manufacturer's recommendation of
1.5 bar -- if I were a wiener. However bike and rider weigh in the
order of 115-118kg, so 1.5 bar is probably a sound guess at a minimum,
and for safety 1.6 bar asd a practical minimum. My roads have the
occasional pothole, which I often take at speed, which is why I like
2.0 bar. I did however for a couple of months run the tyres at 1.8
bar, falling to sometimes 1.65 bar before I reinflated, and there were
no adverse effects.


you dont say.


Your weight is also a consideration,
apparently 100kgf fits all. *So if you adjust your weight to 100kgf
all will be well.


I'm not worried about all being well with my tyres and tubes. I've
already laid in spares. If I lose 15-18kg, I'll be so svelte, I'll
have to give up cycling and become a model. You're out of this world,
Trevor. As if anyone would just lose an ungodly amount of weight to
suit the rating on their bicycle tyres...


....or their spooks.
  #6  
Old August 9th 09, 02:53 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Andre Jute[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,422
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On Aug 9, 2:05*am, someone wrote:
On 8 Aug, 22:34, Andre Jute wrote:



If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *


What does frequency of use have to do with manufacturers'
recommendations, except in maintenance and replacement?


"diddly squat", been at the malt again, Andre?


I'm not the one who is confused, sonny. You claim in relation to tyre
inflation recommendations by manufacturers, "If you ride a bike ona
daily basis the manfacturers recommendations mean diddly squat." I
asked you how frequency of use changes inflation recommendations, and
you accuse me of being drunk. That's not an answer. pal, that's just
smoke to hide the fact that you spoke without thinking.

Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment. *Too hard is just too hard,
dont go there. *That 1.5 bar will be for a particular rim which you
are probably not using and will be the safe running level at which to
prevent tyre detatchment. *


I imagine the 60mm balloons are specified at 1.5 bar for the ERTRO
recommendation of IIRC 21mm which was in force when the Big Apples hit
the market. In 2006 ERTRO also condescended to permit tyres up to 62mm
on 19mm rims.


I have noticed your imagination has run an absolute riot recently.


Crap. If you have better facts than mine. put them on the table.
Personal attacks like "I have noticed your imagination has run an
absolute riot recently" don't enlighten anyone in the slightest, or
persuade anyone that you know better than I do. Facts, pal, if you
have any. If not, a quote from ERTRO trumps your ignorance any day of
the week.

My rims are 25mm between the beads, so in theory at least, I could
reduce inflation pressure below the manufacturer's recommendation of
1.5 bar -- if I were a wiener. However bike and rider weigh in the
order of 115-118kg, so 1.5 bar is probably a sound guess at a minimum,
and for safety 1.6 bar asd a practical minimum. My roads have the
occasional pothole, which I often take at speed, which is why I like
2.0 bar. I did however for a couple of months run the tyres at 1.8
bar, falling to sometimes 1.65 bar before I reinflated, and there were
no adverse effects.


you dont say.


Why, yes, I do. Do you have any experience of balloon tyres or are you
merely another RBT knowall, like that idiot "jim beam"?

Your weight is also a consideration,
apparently 100kgf fits all. *So if you adjust your weight to 100kgf
all will be well.


I'm not worried about all being well with my tyres and tubes. I've
already laid in spares. If I lose 15-18kg, I'll be so svelte, I'll
have to give up cycling and become a model. You're out of this world,
Trevor. As if anyone would just lose an ungodly amount of weight to
suit the rating on their bicycle tyres...


...or their spooks.


WTF? Perhaps you're the one who has been drinking...

Unsigned out of growing impatience
  #7  
Old August 9th 09, 04:28 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
someone
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,340
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On 9 Aug, 02:53, Andre Jute wrote:
On Aug 9, 2:05*am, someone wrote:

On 8 Aug, 22:34, Andre Jute wrote:


If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *


What does frequency of use have to do with manufacturers'
recommendations, except in maintenance and replacement?


"diddly squat", been at the malt again, Andre?


I'm not the one who is confused, sonny. You claim in relation to tyre
inflation recommendations by manufacturers, "If you ride a bike ona
daily basis the manfacturers recommendations mean diddly squat." I
asked you how frequency of use changes inflation recommendations, and
you accuse me of being drunk. That's not an answer. pal, that's just
smoke to hide the fact that you spoke without thinking.

Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment. *Too hard is just too hard,
dont go there. *That 1.5 bar will be for a particular rim which you
are probably not using and will be the safe running level at which to
prevent tyre detatchment. *


I imagine the 60mm balloons are specified at 1.5 bar for the ERTRO
recommendation of IIRC 21mm which was in force when the Big Apples hit
the market. In 2006 ERTRO also condescended to permit tyres up to 62mm
on 19mm rims.


I have noticed your imagination has run an absolute riot recently.


Crap. If you have better facts than mine. put them on the table.
Personal attacks like "I have noticed your imagination has run an
absolute riot recently" don't enlighten anyone in the slightest, or
persuade anyone that you know better than I do. Facts, pal, if you
have any. If not, a quote from ERTRO trumps your ignorance any day of
the week.

My rims are 25mm between the beads, so in theory at least, I could
reduce inflation pressure below the manufacturer's recommendation of
1.5 bar -- if I were a wiener. However bike and rider weigh in the
order of 115-118kg, so 1.5 bar is probably a sound guess at a minimum,
and for safety 1.6 bar asd a practical minimum. My roads have the
occasional pothole, which I often take at speed, which is why I like
2.0 bar. I did however for a couple of months run the tyres at 1.8
bar, falling to sometimes 1.65 bar before I reinflated, and there were
no adverse effects.


you dont say.


Why, yes, I do. Do you have any experience of balloon tyres or are you
merely another RBT knowall, like that idiot "jim beam"?

Your weight is also a consideration,
apparently 100kgf fits all. *So if you adjust your weight to 100kgf
all will be well.


I'm not worried about all being well with my tyres and tubes. I've
already laid in spares. If I lose 15-18kg, I'll be so svelte, I'll
have to give up cycling and become a model. You're out of this world,
Trevor. As if anyone would just lose an ungodly amount of weight to
suit the rating on their bicycle tyres...


...or their spooks.


WTF? Perhaps you're the one who has been drinking...

Unsigned out of growing impatience


Bovril. I really thought your title for this thread was an accusation
about contributers to this newsgroup and was more than slightly amused
to find it was you again being the lightweight balloon.
  #8  
Old August 9th 09, 06:41 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Andre Jute[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,422
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On Aug 9, 4:28*am, someone wrote:

Bovril. *I really thought your title for this thread was an accusation
about contributers to this newsgroup and was more than slightly amused
to find it was you again being the lightweight balloon.


More smoke. Looks to everyone except possibly the peanut gallery in my
killfile of useless scum that you just made up any old thing in your
hurry to contradict everything I say, and that you came an ignorant
cropper. Here are only a few samples of your stupidity and ignorance:

"someone" aka Trevor Jeffries:
If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat.


Andre Jute
What does frequency of use have to do with manufacturers'
recommendations, except in maintenance and replacement?


No reply received, just a lot of weaseling and personal attacks.
You're stupid and ignorant, Jeffries, a bad combination.

Andre Jute:
I imagine the 60mm balloons are specified at 1.5 bar for the ERTRO
recommendation of IIRC 21mm which was in force when the Big Apples hit
the market. In 2006 ERTRO also condescended to permit tyres up to 62mm
on 19mm rims.


"someone" aka Trevor Jeffries:
I have noticed your imagination has run an absolute riot recently.


Andre Jute:
Crap. If you have better facts than mine. put them on the table.
Personal attacks like "I have noticed your imagination has run an
absolute riot recently" don't enlighten anyone in the slightest, or
persuade anyone that you know better than I do. Facts, pal, if you
have any. If not, a quote from ERTRO trumps your ignorance any day of
the week.


Instead of facts, Jeffries sends another vapid personal attack
intended to imply that he has superior knowledge (to ERTRO!) and
telling us only that he is a pig-ignorant blusterer:

Bovril. I really thought your title for this thread was an accusation
about contributers to this newsgroup and was more than slightly amused
to find it was you again being the lightweight balloon.


Jefferies is just another internet know-it-all from the Planet
Paranoia.

Flick.

Unsigned out of contempt
  #9  
Old August 9th 09, 06:52 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Chalo
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,093
Default The price of lightweight balloons

RonSonic wrote:

someone wrote:

If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment.


What is this "tire detachment" of which you speak? Tubeless tires run some risk
of such a thing, but tubes will pinch flat long before anything like that
happens.


He might mean casing roll, which isn't detachment exactly, but can
detach rider from bike.

If you want to know what that is, put 60mm tire on a 19mm wide rim,
inflate to 25 psi and go searching for maximum lean angle.

Chalo
  #10  
Old August 9th 09, 10:44 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Andre Jute[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,422
Default The price of lightweight balloons

On Aug 9, 6:52*am, Chalo wrote:
RonSonic wrote:

someone wrote:


If you ride a bike ona daily basis the manfacturers recommendations
mean diddly squat. *Bigger and softer mean more comfort. *Too soft
means reduced control or tyre detatchment.


What is this "tire detachment" of which you speak? Tubeless tires run some risk
of such a thing, but tubes will pinch flat long before anything like that
happens.


He might mean casing roll, which isn't detachment exactly, but can
detach rider from bike.


Poor Jeffries didn't know what he meant. He was just picking on me,
saying something contrary to everything I said. If I said the sun
shone in Bandon, he'd claim it didn't. His apparent motive is currying
favour with the scum in my killfile. Some of that ludicrous crap he
came up with was funny.

If you want to know what that is, put 60mm tire on a 19mm wide rim,
inflate to 25 psi and go searching for maximum lean angle.

Chalo


I have some good 19mm wheels, longtime favourites when fitted with
37mm Marathon Plus and the functional equivalent from Bontrager. Maybe
I'll fit up some 60mm Big Apple and see if I can induce a frightening
casing roll.

I must say though that at between 1.6 and 2.0 bar in Big Apple 60-622
on 25mm internal width XL25 rims, I do not find the steering loose in
the slightest, so I don't expect that going down to 19mm will make
enough difference to be dangerous, never mind frightening.

Now 17mm might be a different story... As it happens, i have some fave
17mm Bontrager wheels too, and I've been meaning to try roller brakes
on my Kranich (which has clearances for the Big Apples).

I'll let you know when I get around to it.

Thanks for the idea.

Andre Jute
You can ride only one bike at a time
 




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