RojoRacing
Donut Powered Wise-guy
Cool little video from Shane Miller.
Exactly: I'm still waiting for the video on that!If I'm Jason and bombing down Mt. McKinley at 100mph, I'd be damn sure my wheelset was balanced.
Larry how many wheels do you have???Nice video - I will definitely have to check my wheels and see how they are..
What affects your performance more, minor vibration that it essentially cancelled/damped out by the interaction between the tire and the road (and your personal attach points) or an additional 28g of weight (2 wheels X 14g)?
On a smooth velodrome track, I would be balancing my wheels (I think he sez that). On the road where I have to accelerate that 28g with every push of the pedal, I think I'd live with a little massage from my tires. If I'm Jason and bombing down Mt. McKinley at 100mph, I'd be damn sure my wheelset was balanced.
The 28grams of weight will take more energy to accelerate with each push of the pedal but it will also keep you rolling closer to the same speed between pedal power strokes. It for that reason I use my disc wheel covers in my mountain races so balance your wheels will save more then hurt. Only time the extra weight might hurt more then help is low speed racing with tons of acceleration points like cyclocross. And just in case you guys were wondering, no my wheels are not balanced even though I have considered it on numerous occasions. I will be giving it a shot after seeing this video though simply to see if I can feel any difference when I'm upwards of 50 mph.
Another thing to note is it's fair to guess Shane's wheel were relatively balanced from the factory but adding a tire and 14 gram steel valve stem to the equation will net you 14 grams of imbalance. Now if you're using a 8 grams alloy tubeless stem then you'll most likely only need 8 grams of weight on the other side. One other thing to consider is when using tubeless sealant in the tires any stanimals that form in the tire will through off the balance so this idea of balancing your wheels could be a mute point after a month of use.
Here's another idea to chew on in regarded to balanced wheels and tubeless. If your wheel was perfectly balanced with a clean tire and fresh sealant then you can periodically throw the wheel on the balancer stand to check of any funny business has formed inside the tire. If you have a large stanimal in there then your wheel will no longer be balanced so that can be a prompt to open it up and clean and add new sealant.
I once used stans sealant on my mtbs. Picked out many giant boogers as above.
Um sounds good can I get someI've actually swiped a patent and made my own chitosan biopolymer sealant, with mesoporous silicagel and aluminosilicate nano-particles, even improved it somewhat (I think ).
Works as well as Stans (or better - at least at plugging small pores with minimum 'sweating' and air loss in porous tires like Continental) and would not form 'boogers', ever - the mechanism of action is different - logjam action instead of PH-induced rapid polymerisation.