On the bold, in your opinion, would the "desired results" include things like minimized rolling resistance and a great ride? Would love to know more about how rim vs. tire width play here.From a purists' perspective I agree doing new wheels is the 'right' thing to do mechanically, but realistically you can get the desired result with just a tire.
And its reversible if you decide you want to go back.
I know the guy who did the yellow bike. Pic is from 2018 and he still has it like this. Me... I didn't last past 6 months and maybe 3000 miles. Both bikes use 80mm rims. The yellow one is 2.5" Hookworms. The orange one is 2.35" Schwalbe's. The sidewall/casing is actually straight up from the rim on both of them.
Yes, they'll fit. The bike will roll with them installed. My question is more like will they perform as designed?So I guess something like Schwalbe Moto-X (26 x 2.40) might fit RadRover just fine?
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What did you get for mileage on your Kendas? I've got about 2700 miles on my Rover (mostly pavement and groomed gravel trails) and there's still life left in them. I expect I'll replace them during the winter down time and will probably go with a street tire this time. Either 26X4 or 26X3 but will probably stick with the 4's as I'm too cheap to replace my tubes and Tuffy liners.Thanks. I've seen users successfully switching to 3 inches tires.
I was wondering for 2.25" due to the larger choice of tires. Probably next year, I'll change for 3" tires after using my current Jumbo Jim ones (which should last longer than the Kenda stock ones according to reviews).
Yes you do need to adjust your tire diameter in your display. Always necessary when fiddling with tire diameters. 29" is for big tires like a 4.5-4.8. 28" is what I am using right now with 4.0" tires on that orange bike. Arrived at via measuring.That looks like the easiest solution. Just change the tire.
How's the speedometer though? Did you have to change it?
I know typically people just set their speedometer setting to 29 inch for 26 x 4.0 because of larger tire diameter.
The correct answer is yes, no and maybe. A '29er' is a 700C road bike rim in mtb width. 700C is not accurate as a diameter. Its 622mm using the metric ETRTO standard found on the side of the tire. In the EU, 28" is commonly referred to as equivalent to 700C but the ETRTO diameter is 635.I believe 28, 700C and 29 are all the same. People just call them differently.
Though, I could be completely wrong, I know they're all interchangeable from my experience.
Well here's where the instruction manual ends and experience picks up. People do this all the time so what are the real world consequences? Reality is you can fudge things quite a lot and you'll be fine. Can you put a too big tire on a too narrow rim? Up to a point. Will there be consequences? Yes, ranging from 'totally unnoticeable' to 'tire falls off and you crash'. You need to know what you are getting yourself into via experience. If you don't, that chart gives you some guardrails, although personally I prefer the much more complete DT Swiss Tire Pressure and Dimension guide (which is still conservative, but a good starting point).Well not likely, because 2.4- 2.6 tires are designed for 25mm to 40mm max.
So obviously RadRover's 80mm is too wide for optimal performance.
The desired results were ultra smooth rolling resistance on hard rubber. I loved the ability to lift and just coast for what seemed like forever, unpowered. Is that part of a great ride? Yes. But there were undesired results too. That higher pressure tire with minimal (albeit sufficient) sidewall had a whole lot less cushion, and it changed how the bike handled imperfect road surfaces dramatically. Remember an ebike goes faster than a bicycle. So you come up on things faster and impacts are magnified by speed. The wheel's strength was just fine (a hand built wheel using double-wall Weinmann rim with DT Champion 2.0 spokes and brass nipples, so thats quite a bit stronger than any machine-built Chinese wheel).On the bold, in your opinion, would the "desired results" include things like minimized rolling resistance and a great ride? Would love to know more about how rim vs. tire width play here.
Something to note: That chart you linked is not gospel. If you look at the DT Swiss chart, they use increments of "2.35" to 2.6" as the closest to your 2.4-2.6 range. For a 2.35 tire, the possible rim combinations range from 20mm to 51mm, where the 'possible' combinations are that range, but the 'ideal' combinations are 25-33mm. For a 2.6" tire, max possible are 23-51mm, with ideal being the same 25-33. Also if you have hookless rims the separate chart gives slightly different guidelines.Well not likely, because 2.4- 2.6 tires are designed for 25mm to 40mm max.
So obviously RadRover's 80mm is too wide for optimal performance.
I think it pretty safe to assume what they're going to say. Where they'll stumble is the why.....In my experience, no two tires are the same. Continental for example, I found they're way narrower than what's indicated on the sidewall.
I know it's obvious but if you really want to know for sure, contact the manufacture.
Call Schwalbe and say, "I can put 26 x 2.25 size Marathon Plus HS468 on Rad Rover's 80mm rim?" and they will tell you yes or no.