Speed difference between 25 and 28 tyres

vjanda
vjanda Posts: 20
edited June 2016 in Road beginners
Hi folks,
can anyone tell me what sort of speed gain if any I could expect by switching from 28c tyres inflated to 90psi to 25c 110psi?
I ride my 28s around 18mph on the flat at a medium pace.
Cheers :lol:

Comments

  • cycleclinic
    cycleclinic Posts: 6,865
    none on a smooth road on a rough road it will depend how rough the road is. in most cases no difference in speed will be noticed.
    http://www.thecycleclinic.co.uk -wheel building and other stuff.
  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    Thx, I guess I'll stick to my 28's and train more to get faster :)
    It is beyond me how pro riders can ride 130k at 45k/h.
    I can hardly hit 40 going bloody downhill.
  • davidof
    davidof Posts: 3,032
    I have no idea but what I can tell you is there is a 1100m climb behind my house, largely 8-10% grades. My fastest ride up on 23mm tires took 1h02m on a carbon framed road bike. I rode it on a 1977 bike I got out of a skip with 28mm cheap Michelin tires and it took me 1h12m, I could probably have ridden it in 1h05m on that day on my carbon bike. So yeah, the tires probably don't make much difference, fractions of a minute.
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  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    Good to know.
    I thought the higher pressure and lower rolling resistance of a 25 might gain me 5% but I guess I was wrong and too optimistic :)
    Thanks
  • The truth, as I see it, is that nobody knows.
    Although I have read some posts on this forum where you'd be forgiven for thinking otherwise.
    "You really think you can burn off sugar with exercise?" downhill paul
  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    One thing is for sure, a lighter bike is a faster bike.
    I recently sold my old mtb and got a sirrus pro that's about 8 lbs lighter. I recon I gained almost 2mph.
    Next mission is to drop 8lbs of body fat :)
  • step83
    step83 Posts: 4,170
    Was going to say youll get to a point where all the bike weight saving in the world will make no odds. Its easier an cheaper to loose weight yourself than off the bike.

    Regarding tyres don't forget tyre pressure comes into play as well, lower pressure will increase the contact patch with the ground giving greater traction to a point. Think how hard it is to ride on a low tyre, its about finding the sweet spot for your total weight with the bike and the tyre pressure.
  • singleton
    singleton Posts: 2,489
    It's not as simple as 25mm v 28mm tyres unfortunately.

    There are many places on the web where you can get informaiton about rolling resistance of tyres. The current perceived wisdom is that wider tyres have a lower rolling resistance for the same pressure - but the actual figures vary by tyres and tubes.

    Hours of reading here: http://www.bicyclerollingresistance.com
  • Bobbinogs
    Bobbinogs Posts: 4,841
    vjanda wrote:
    One thing is for sure, a lighter bike is a faster bike.
    I recently sold my old mtb and got a sirrus pro that's about 8 lbs lighter. I recon I gained almost 2mph.
    ...

    mmm, I think that 'evidence' neatly overlooks a whole heap of factors. As an example, if you wore a weighted running jacket of 8lbs I bet the Sirrus would still be faster than the MTB, maybe as much as 1.73mph faster (approx).
  • fenix
    fenix Posts: 5,437
    Both of the pressures you mention are too high unless you're extremely heavy.

    In the real world you'd not notice any difference between tyres. 5% is a huge amount.
  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    I'm 88kg
  • drlodge
    drlodge Posts: 4,826
    You'd likely see more of a difference moving to a better tyre, whatever that is. So depends on the tyres you're talking about...?
    WyndyMilla Massive Attack | Rourke 953 | Condor Italia 531 Pro | Boardman CX Pro | DT Swiss RR440 Tubeless Wheels
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  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    I only got the Sirrus a couple of weeks ago.
    It had a nasty heavy Chinese 28 and 35 on the front.
    Decided to replace both with Michelin Pro 4 Endurance 28's for starters.
    They will save me over 500g in weight alone.
    Will report on any speed change in 2 weeks when I get them...
  • redhanded
    redhanded Posts: 139
    FWIW there is research indicating that narrower and higher pressure tyres aren't faster anyway.

    They may FEEL faster as they have a harsher ride and you associate this with going faster, but this doesn't actually mean you are going faster.

    https://janheine.wordpress.com/2016/06/ ... confirmed/
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Posts: 79,667
    Step83 wrote:
    Was going to say youll get to a point where all the bike weight saving in the world will make no odds. Its easier an cheaper to loose weight yourself than off the bike.

    Really? If its so easy to lose weight then why are we an obese nation with a multi million pound weight loss industry?

    It is way way easier to go out and buy a light bike lol.

    Cheaper is not really a thing, as if you lose weight you will probably want a light bike all the more, and then there is all the new clothes that you will have to buy!

    An 8lb lighter bike will feel much better and more noticable than losing 8lb in bodyweight IME.
    The best solution is to do both of course (if you are overweight).

    It depends what bodyweight you are losing the 8lb from though of course.

    Basically the goal is to be not overweight, and ride a light (well specced) bike.
    Its not one v the other, its both!

    And leave the financials out of the equation.
    If you cannot or (more likely) do not want to spend the money, then just don't.
    Bitching about it just to make yourself feel better about spending your money on other things is v sad.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Posts: 79,667
    vjanda wrote:
    Hi folks,
    can anyone tell me what sort of speed gain if any I could expect by switching from 28c tyres to 25c ?

    Cheers :lol:

    All things being equal it will be almost exactly the same as the difference between 25c and 23c.

    Looking to quantify speed gains is a loosing battle (especially on here).

    Just get the nicest quality kit that looks good, feels good, and then enjoy riding your bike.

    Any speed gains will be a nice bonus that you may never be able to quantify, but if you do, keep it to yourself :wink:
  • simon_masterson
    simon_masterson Posts: 2,740
    It matters far more that you have the right tyre for your rim, but a perfectly matched combination of 23mm rim and 23mm tyre is not going to give you any benefit easily measurable without a stopwatch. I like wide tyres on the road, and I'd probably try them for TTs if I had wider rims (and clearances allowed). The training tyres I use on my TT bike are 20mm and sluggish, so it's not just the width - it matters far more that you use good tyres, and latex tubes.
  • kajjal
    kajjal Posts: 3,380
    I found 25mm tyres better but do weigh 100kg. A more noticeable improvement was moving from cheap to good quality tyres. I currently have 30mm tyres on as i go off road a fair bit and need the extra grip. They are smoother on road but a little slower up hill.
  • vjanda
    vjanda Posts: 20
    I hope I made the right choice with the Michelin Pro 4 Endurance.
    I was told they offer good protection while still rolling well.
    Can't wait to try them out.
  • simon_masterson
    simon_masterson Posts: 2,740
    Depending on the roads you ride on, you may be able to get away with something racier when the weather's nice - I rarely puncture on Corsa CXs where I live.
  • step83
    step83 Posts: 4,170
    Carbonator wrote:
    Really? If its so easy to lose weight then why are we an obese nation with a multi million pound weight loss industry?

    It is way way easier to go out and buy a light bike lol.

    Cheaper is not really a thing, as if you lose weight you will probably want a light bike all the more, and then there is all the new clothes that you will have to buy!

    An 8lb lighter bike will feel much better and more noticable than losing 8lb in bodyweight IME.
    The best solution is to do both of course (if you are overweight).

    It depends what bodyweight you are losing the 8lb from though of course.

    Basically the goal is to be not overweight, and ride a light (well specced) bike.
    Its not one v the other, its both!

    And leave the financials out of the equation.
    If you cannot or (more likely) do not want to spend the money, then just don't.
    Bitching about it just to make yourself feel better about spending your money on other things is v sad.

    I think you missed the point of my comment. Cost vs weight saving its cheaper to say go for a run extra a week or walk to the shop rather than drive in order to loose a bit of weight, than it is to as you suggest to buy a new bike.
  • giropaul
    giropaul Posts: 414
    Despite the very best efforts of the marketeers, within reasonable bounds you can't buy speed. Within races there will be bikes that vary in weight by a kg or so. Some riders run 25 mm tyres, some 23mm. These things will not affect the finishing order I'm afraid. I often see amateur races won by riders on standard aluminium wheels, against riders on deep carbon jobs. Often aluminium frames as well.
    Interestingly, in Belgium for instance, riders seem to spend less on expensive bikes and wheels etc, but more on correct nutrition.
  • Alex99
    Alex99 Posts: 1,407
    vjanda wrote:
    Hi folks,
    can anyone tell me what sort of speed gain if any I could expect by switching from 28c tyres inflated to 90psi to 25c 110psi?
    I ride my 28s around 18mph on the flat at a medium pace.
    Cheers :lol:

    For the same model tyre, you won't get much difference. Wider tyres have some advantages. Narrower tyres are generally more aerodynamic. There is probably a crossover point where the narrower tyre is faster, but likely at speeds much more than 18 mph. Wear out you current tyres, then buy whatevery you fancy trying out. For anyone not racing, 28c tyres at 80-90 PSI seems like a good idea to me (on rough UK roads anyway).