Opposite results for me actually. I had moderate load, big hoss bag and mini-rack front with little loafer and handlebar bag with stuff attached to the top of the mini-rack. My load included clothing, tent, sleeping bag, thermarest. It does sound like your load might have been a little more than mine. Mine was for four days, camping three nights.
Anyway, I was on an Atlantis with Jack Brown greens. No problems at all, and they rode great. It sounds like I was lucky and got from the tires what you were hoping for, Jim. Sorry about your flats.
But I did get flats front and rear on an unloaded ride at home 4 weeks later on the same set-up! Goatheads I believe, two patches rear and one patch front.
-Jim W.
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Same is true for those armored tires you mentioned as alternate choices,
right?
As a point of contrast, I had mentioned my good luck with the JB green on a short tour, but I forgot to mention one other fact. My JB's were new out of the bag, and that ride was the first time they were used.
-Jim W.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
Sent: Sep 21, 2011 2:10 PM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [RBW] JB Green not really up to loaded touring
I really like the JB Green tires for the snappy/cushy/grippy ride quality, and have been enjoying them for awhile on my non-Rivendell sport-touring bicycle. Last week, I did a partial tour (moderately loaded - front Ortlieb panniers and a big Carradice saddlebag, etc) of the Oregon Coast, then back to Portland for a couple days of exploring that fine city. During a four-day period, I had two front flats and two rear flats. Two of the four flats were caused by tiny thorns, one by some unidentified metal object, and one I never did diagnose. My second flat on the front tire resulted in me riding on it for a 100 feet or so until I could get the bike stopped, and that left the tire cut and shredded beyond the point that I'd consider using the tire again. Luckily I packed a spare tire (700x32 Pasela TG) that got me through the rest of the trip.
I had envisioned a light-zippy bike for moderately loaded touring, but after this experiment I must recommend a tougher tire than JB Green. I still plan to use this fantastic tire for light-loaded applications on decent roads. For moderately loaded applications, I think I'll use Marathon Racers or Supremes next time.
> Loaded touring requires different tools that light sport riding. My Atlantis is not as light and lively as my Rambouilet but I would not take the Rampouilet loaded touring.
As an aside, many "loaded touring" cyclists are really "overloaded touring" cyclists. When I read crazyguyonabike.com reports of people hauling 85 lbs of stuff on their bikes my response is "WTF?"
Google "Igor Kovse" who does extended camping tours with about 10-15 lbs worth of gear, including things like riding through Tibet, across southern Africa, across the US and Canada. He takes things to an extreme (for example, he rides in Crocs because they are lighter than cycling shoes and very comfortable), but he hauls less stuff for a month long tour than a lot of people take on an S24O. I did a 10 day non-camping tour of the Alps in 2002 and all of my gear for the entire trip fit in my Carradice Nelson LongFlap, probably 10-11 pounds of stuff.
Without the masses of excess stuff turning a bike into a two wheeled Winnebago, one can readily tour around the world on a bike like a Rambouillet. Kovse uses an aluminum Giant racing bike with a CF fork, for pete's sake. Surely a Rambouillet would be a much more graceful choice for that sort of thing. And of course thousands of people have done traditional loaded touring on bikes much less suitable for that task than a Rambouillet.