This question always comes up when I am riding. At my cruising speeds 16-20 mph with occasional speed bursts up to 30, wind causes nothing more than a slight wobble. Besides, didn't Jim Parker do a report on Maria using full disc's in 25 mph gusts? I can recall at one time the consensus in recumbent land was a rear disc provided stability in wind.
We will see; it has been crickets so far; but they were out at Kona for the ironman world championships so I was expecting a delay. Not going to worry unless I don't hear anything by Monday. First contact was by back channels about 4-5 days ago as the problem was becoming apparent; and the official re-request for help on official channels last night. When we first placed the order; one of the wheelsets got "lost" and not shipped; they fixed that promptly so that is a good sign. What I am really curious is whether this will be sorry it does not work or an investigation of why it's not working. Pretty hard to make a "tubeless ready" performance wheel and not have it work with the Pro One. Until today that was really the best performance Tubeless. But now there is this..... http://www.bicyclerollingresistance.com/road-bike-reviews/hutchinson-fusion-5-galactik-2017 I suppose I could try that tire but that leaves me with a bunch of unused Pro Ones and more expense.(eagerly awaiting The Ratz carbon issue to see if it holds
As the Flo guys stated the front wheel is on a rotating axis with your hands on the handlebars. I would assume in the case of Cruzbikes having your feet to also stabilize that rotating axis will make the wobble less. I don't know but there aren't many people riding 90's on Cruzbikes to ask. I've been on mine since 2012. In fact I chose to ride 90's front and back on the ride to Jacksonville two days before hurricane Matthew (windy). I wanted the push, worked for me.
Yeah I did catch your mention about my slightly unique riding conditions. It just seemed like you guys started heading off on a tangent that was stating the CruzBike could handle deep wheels up front with not ill effects so I just wanted to retouch on my experiences for reference. With no wind I see zero reason not to run front and rear disc wheels even on a course with lots of cornering because it's only the cross wind that messes with those wheels.I discounted your riding style in my first post. Your riding speeds change the dynamics a lot. When you ride the Blue ridge parkway/ skyline drive its nothing but up one climb down to the next "Gap" back up, then another Gap. These Gaps often have nasty cross winds. Yep, probably not a good choice to have 90's there. The wise will exercise caution on them no matter their wheel size. The fool will also learn to use caution. It just takes him a bit longer to figure it out.
. It just seemed like you guys started heading off on a tangent that was stating the CruzBike could handle deep wheels up front with not ill effects so I just wanted to retouch on my experiences for reference.
on the correct course
I really wish I had a deep front wheel to ride in the upcoming 24hr but it's hard to find a deep wider wheel that disc brake compatible. I guess I could have ordered another 55mm drive wheel to swap with my 33mm but it's too late now.
I don't know if the 45 degree seat of the Silvio V1.0, with 30 mm deep rims, helps with wind gust stability, but I took up 1/3 to 1/4 the space of DF riders on Cycle Oregon 2013, when overtaking on very gusty days!
OR does being a little Clydesdale rider make a big difference??
Father Christmas has made an early present run!!!Just got the mew test FLO-90 all carbon wheel on Tuesday.
This one is to correct the problem discovered in November.
The results are in:
The 25c sits at about 0.5mm narrower than the rim itself making it likely nice and aero. Comparing this wheel to the other one; the bead bed is much cleaner and looks much more textbook tubeless in design.
- 1 wrap of Schwalbe tubeless tape
- 1 brand new Pro One 700x25c
- Dry mounted; seated with just 110psi
- Perfect seal without sealant
- The wheel is solid and stable. no flex
So we have a winner.