0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 5901 times.
Pardon the newb question, but what arethe advantages of 29" wheels?ThanksMike Fox
Here's an article that touches on some of the finer details of the debate:http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php?id=tech/2006/features/29invs26inpt2
If you like to tinker, and reconfigure your bikes at all, an interesting 29" choice might be something like a Surly Karate Monkey. I tend to swap parts around, and configure bikes for different tasks, like commuting, single speed, off-road touring, etc., so I've been really intrigued by all options that the Karate Monkey gives, although I wish it had horizontal dropouts rather than track ends.Available as a bike or frame/fork - and geometry allows for adding a suspension fork if you want.http://www.surlybikes.com/km_comp.htmlJim C
Quote from: PhilNYC on 21 May 2009, 06:26 pm Here's an article that touches on some of the finer details of the debate:http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php?id=tech/2006/features/29invs26inpt2Seems like they barely got past the introduction in that tech piece. When I checked later years (this was 2006) to find conclusions, there was a brief mention in Feb 07 then apparently nothing since, so no conclusions that I could find. I wonder what became of their carefully set up test.
This thread makes me want to get a bike. Phil, where do you ride around here?
Quote from: mikef on 21 May 2009, 02:46 pmPardon the newb question, but what arethe advantages of 29" wheels?ThanksMike FoxThere is continuing debate as to the merits of 29" wheels. The high-level benefit is that they roll over stuff easier and are more stable at higher speeds. The downsides are that the larger wheels add weight and are not quite as nimble in the handling. Here's an article that touches on some of the finer details of the debate:http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php?id=tech/2006/features/29invs26inpt2
Aren't the horizontal dropouts what make that bike good for single-speed configuration? I thought horizontal dropouts = track ends...?
Quote from: PhilNYC on 21 May 2009, 06:26 pmQuote from: mikef on 21 May 2009, 02:46 pmPardon the newb question, but what arethe advantages of 29" wheels?ThanksMike FoxThere is continuing debate as to the merits of 29" wheels. The high-level benefit is that they roll over stuff easier and are more stable at higher speeds. The downsides are that the larger wheels add weight and are not quite as nimble in the handling. Here's an article that touches on some of the finer details of the debate:http://www.cyclingnews.com/tech.php?id=tech/2006/features/29invs26inpt2Heh heh. I just put a 650B wheel on the front of my Prophet. 650 is between 26" and 29" at 27.5"
Quote from: konut on 21 May 2009, 10:34 pmHeh heh. I just put a 650B wheel on the front of my Prophet. 650 is between 26" and 29" at 27.5"Where do you find tires...?
Heh heh. I just put a 650B wheel on the front of my Prophet. 650 is between 26" and 29" at 27.5"
Quote from: PhilNYC on 22 May 2009, 12:00 pmQuote from: konut on 21 May 2009, 10:34 pmHeh heh. I just put a 650B wheel on the front of my Prophet. 650 is between 26" and 29" at 27.5"Where do you find tires...? You can probably order 650B tires through any bike store, if you don't have a shop that stocks them. Here's two places you can order on line - Harris Cyclery and Rivendell Bikes.http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/tires/584.htmlhttp://www.rivbike.com/products/list/tires_tubes_pumps_patches?a=1&page=allJim C