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Stat crux dum volvitur orbis. (The cross stands motionless while the world revolves.) Carthusian motto
It is we who change; He remains the same. Eckhart
Kinei hos eromenon. (It moves [all things] as the beloved.) Aristotle
But would I notice the same change if I went from the light Jack Browns on my SS to Compass tires? I would like to upgrade from the bottom of the line wire bead Schwalbe's currently on my Clem (mostly because they have a wobble in the bead) to a lighter "all road" 650b. How does one compare the supple-itude?


How much to drift on the side of safety is of course a personal thing, but methinks you´ve got to take some risks in life. I have ridden many pleasurable miles on the Heron Touring with Paselas on bad roads without mishap, but my custom Riv sports Pari-Motos. Just wonderful. Otoh they have alternated with Jack Brown Greens and I must admit that on a good road I can´t notice any difference, that comes on bad roads and trails which also means that it comes with a risk. I´ve had one sidewall fail under me and that was not smooth. Still worth it.
To everyone her/his pleasure, but it´s good to know what you are doing. The same with loads and loading.
Olof Stroh
Uppsala Sweden
700c Kenda -5
700c Specialized Armadillo-5
700c Gatorskin-7
650b Swifty-4
650b original Rumpkin-6
650b Marathon Green Guard-8.5
650b Hetre-10
650b Cypress-10
650b Loup Loup-10
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How much to drift on the side of safety is of course a personal thing, but methinks you´ve got to take some risks in life.

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-Justin
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Like, they claimed a certain tire or frame felt faster, when in fact, one of the other ones they just rode during the test was faster, according to the timer.
From this, BQ concluded that the riders (in their study), could not accurately say which frame/tire was faster.
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but most riders think the feel of road vibration = speed, hence the desire to pump to max rated pressure. I was specifically talking about two different tires but both running well below rated pressure - no vibration whatsoever and only one of them giving occasional shock - and yes, you know for sure when you're trying to chase a tandem with two healthy riders.
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Stat crux dum volvitur orbis. (The cross stands motionless while the world revolves.) Carthusian motto
It is we who change; He remains the same. Eckhart
Kinei hos eromenon. (It moves [all things] as the beloved.) Aristotle
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Speaking from my own experience:
It is really hard for me to know if one bike is faster than another, or if a component makes it faster/slower. Maybe because of the engine and wind. Maybe my bikes are very closely related.
The condition of the engine changes. Wind does too. Here in central Maryland it is subtly breezy year round.
I know that some days I feel like I can't even get outta my own way on my Bleriot and Sam. Other days, I feel like I'm flying along easily. Is it the wind? Is it me? This happens regardless of which tires I use.
I had a Giant carbo/alu bike that felt fast, and it seems that I have dropped 1mph on my overall route on bike time average speeds since I switched to 650b steel, even on Compass/BQ tires. But, the fastest commute on bike timings were done on my steel bikes with both Marathons and Compass/GB tires. I'm also a few years older. Bith Rivs beat the Giant. Me? Wind?
But my overall avapeeds were faster on the Giant with Gatorskins.
So I I dont understand it and cannot say for sure which bike with which version of components is faster.
I can say the Rivs are more comfy, better handling, and smoother than the Giant bike.
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I appreciate that the TPI factor was addressed. I wonder who is making tires with multiple layers of casing and slathering them with rubber and puncture protection and marketing them as 300+TPI high-performance tires?Everything else is just reinforcing the idea of supple Compass tires vs. all other tires. I'm glad people like those tires, I really am, but I still wish sense could be made of the varying continuum between those and cheap heavy duty wire bead tires, because I know there are variables in all those tires, I know they ride differently, and knowing the qualitative differences in how they ride is actually what this thread was supposed to be about: how to measure the suppleness of tires that are not "THE supple tires".
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Therefore, probably the best thing to do is to decide what features in a tire you are looking for and then ask for recommendations in a new post on this forum. There are many forum members who are tire enthusiasts who could give recommendations, being as they have already run the gamut of tire trial and error, trying to find the best of the best.