25mm tires too thick for my fork?
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- This topic has 9 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 8 months ago by
mstone.
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AuthorPosts
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September 8, 2015 at 12:45 pm #1037205
Raymo853
ParticipantI can see no way that tires could effect the shifting, unless, the tire is interfering with the front derailleur. This usually only occurs on mountainb bikes when people switch to way too large tires, say like 2.4″ aka 61 mm tires, on frames deisgned around 2.1, aka 53 mm tires. I suspect when the rear wheel was placed into the rear dropouts slightly off, and that is causing the shifting issue. Try making sure the rear wheel is in there straight and fully. It may also be totally unrelated and just an unfortunate correlation.
Regarding putting the front wheel in dropouts slightly oddly, DO NOT DO THAT. Do not ride the bike that way. That is a easy way to crash very badly. Yes, you need to go back to 23 or narrow tires at least on the front.
September 8, 2015 at 1:23 pm #1037278mstone
Participant@Raymo853 123715 wrote:
Yes, you need to go back to 23 or narrow tires at least on the front.
And now you know for n+1 to make sure that your new bike can take reasonably wide tires.
September 8, 2015 at 1:26 pm #1037279Raymo853
Participant@mstone 123723 wrote:
And now you know for n+1 to make sure that your new bike can take reasonably wide tires.
Buying more objects, yes even bikes, is not a solution but a problem.
September 8, 2015 at 3:29 pm #1037286bkingva
ParticipantThanks everybody! I appreciate the advice. Is there any drawback to running 23″ on the front and 28″ on the back?
September 8, 2015 at 3:43 pm #1037288DismalScientist
ParticipantExcessive torque can cause front end to rise uncontrollably.
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September 8, 2015 at 4:00 pm #1037292bkingva
ParticipantSeriously? And I meant to say: 23″ on the front and 25″ on the back.
September 8, 2015 at 4:05 pm #1037293DismalScientist
ParticipantNo. Some people, if they notice, might think it looks funny.
I would think you have a pretty racy bike with so little clearance with the front fork. Is the frame designed that you will have any problems getting 25s on your rear wheel as well?
September 8, 2015 at 4:11 pm #1037295bkingva
ParticipantI have a 25-year-old Cannondale road bike. The 25mm tire appears to fit just fine on the back, or at least the clearance appears to be fine. (I’m still puzzled by my sudden shifting difficulties, which began immediately after the new tires went on.) But on the front, the top of the 25s rubs the inside of the fork, with a noticeable increase in friction.
September 8, 2015 at 4:13 pm #1037296mstone
Participant@bkingva 123738 wrote:
Seriously? And I meant to say: 23″ on the front and 25″ on the back.
I’ve had that problem, but I chalk it up more to my quads than the tires. The biggest problem is that the small, high pressure front tire will beat you up through the handlebars. But there’s nothing different than there is if both tires were 23.
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