JOSEPHWEISSERT
Zen MBB Master
Here's another installment in the ongoing saga of the Thursday night A ride for your viewing torture.
I now run 25 mm Continental Grand Prix 4000s II tires at 120 psi. Very fast.The other idea is changing my tyres to schwalbe one's tubeless 25mm and then for training pump them up for 95 psi and then for racing pump them up to 115 psi.
Isn't it uncomfortable? I run 25 mm Schwalbe one. On 100 psi it was really harsh, now I am on 90 front/85 rear and it is acceptable. Maybe this is just difference in our weights, but 120 psi sounds like riding on solid wooden wheel for me.I now run 25 mm Continental Grand Prix 4000s II tires at 120 psi. Very fast.
I weigh about 168 pounds. The big difference is probably that I have the Volae seat and maybe you do not. The roads here can be harsh. But the seat compensates effectively.Isn't it uncomfortable? I run 25 mm Schwalbe one. On 100 psi it was really harsh, now I am on 90 front/85 rear and it is acceptable. Maybe this is just difference in our weights, but 120 psi sounds like riding on solid wooden wheel for me.
You are not much bigger than me, I have 130 pounds. I have original seat. It is not perfect, but it does its job. I will maybe try Volae seat in feature, but probably not, the bike was expensive and I cannot and don't want to make it even more expensive.I weigh about 168 pounds. The big difference is probably that I have the Volae seat and maybe you do not. The roads here can be harsh. But the seat compensates effectively.
will maybe try Volae seat in feature, but probably not, the bike was expensive and I cannot and don't want to make it even more expensive.
I run 25 mm Schwalbe one. On 100 psi it was really harsh, now I am on 90 front/85 rear and it is acceptable. Maybe this is just difference in our weights, but 120 psi sounds like riding on solid wooden wheel for me.
For me, it was also the shoulders. With a different seat, the whole upper seat and headrest are out a ways from the point of vibration, so the seat and headrest both act as a big shock absorber. I find it more comfortable than the stock seat and extra padding. If you can accomplish acceptable damping by other means, that's great, because I think the stock seat and headrest are lighter than the replacement seat that I have. And any means to lower the bike's weight is good.Atta boy Snilard don't get suckered into a fancy smancy seat. The stock two piece works just fine. My old bones do just fine and I only use a cover--no padding. You might find like I did that its the head rest that makes all the difference. Make it bigger and softer and all the bumps and lumps disappear.
You are not much bigger than me, I have 130 pounds. I have original seat. It is not perfect, but it does its job. I will maybe try Volae seat in feature, but probably not, the bike was expensive and I cannot and don't want to make it even more expensive.
You are really powerful rider. I see that I have a lot of space to improve when I am looking at your and others videos here on forum.
The stock two piece works just fine. My old bones do just fine and I only use a cover--no padding.
That's an excellent idea. It's basically a pneumatic shock absorber.The head rest on the 18 degree reclined seat that I built for my Sofrider is padded with an old, much-patched but still air-tight bicycle tyre inner tube.
Every other padding material I tried for the neck-rest/head/rest transmitted too much vibration.