Of course. Back tires always wear faster than front tires.
> Should I rotate it to the front?
No. You want the best tire on the front. When your back tire wears
out, rotate the front tire to the back and put the new tire on the
front.
> I weigh
> about 140 lbs.,am not carrying panniers and typically keep them
> inflated to 70-75psi. Any insight is appreciated. Thanks.
Too much pressure for your weight. I use the same pressure you've cited
and I weigh 60 pounds more than you do.
Sounds pretty normal. IME, the rear always wears faster - more of your
weight is over the rear. 2:1 is not unheard of.
Sheldon said it more succinctly, but rotating rear to front is a bad idea.
If anything, buy a new tire, then put that onto the front and rotate the
front to the rear. My least favorite flat (and hardest to control) is a
front tire type, and putting thinner tread up front increases the chance of
that occurence.
Unless I have a long ride coming up, I'll run through the tread to cord on
the back. (And, YES, have had to boot a tire now and again...) As soon as
I see it (if I check, and fenders seem to make this less frequently
observed), I'll retire the tire. I've also gotten in the habit of running
my thumb perpendicular to the tire direction, from rim to rim. This gives
me a pretty good sense of how "edged" the tire is - i.e. how much meat has
worn away from the middle. If it feels square, I might pop the tire off and
get a sense of how much is left by feel (with no tube in place).
Hope that helps,
- Jim
--
Jim Edgar
Cyclo...@earthlink.net
Cyclofiend Bicycle Photo Galleries - http://www.cyclofiend.com
Current Classics - Cross Bikes
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"Maybe a bike, once discarded, pines away year after year for the first hand
that steered it, and as it grows old it dreams, in its bike way, of the
young roads."
-- Robert McCammon, "Boy's Life"
With the Grand Bois especially, when the tire starts getting seriously
thin it becomes much more prone to flats. I take this as an opportunity
to check the thickness by pinching the tire. When it gets down to
"Damn, that's thin in the middle!" -- i.e., feels like the thickness of
a few sheets of paper, even though there's no actual cord showing
through -- I'll replace the tire.
Usually it's pretty late in the season by the time that happens, and at
that point (usually some time in November or early December) I'll take
off the Cypres and replace them with Paselas for the winter season.
I was considering the purchase of a Cypres pair in 700c, what mileage did you reach before this wear occurred?
Also, would you consider them supple and/or shock absorbing and fast like they're intended?
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