Wow, these GatorSkin Hardthingy's feel really slow! It's only one ride and it did feel a little like I had a headwind all the time... but it also felt harder work than normal. Most segment times were pretty slow.
So, I don't mind having a few tyres for different occasionsWhat are people's recommendation for tough, but fast tyres? Maybe I should just get new GP5000's? Maybe I should try those Roubaix that Roady linked?
I went DJI for my last action cam, mainly for the front facing screen... a quick look at the GoPro 9 has me very tempted. I think all your money could be lost in all the accessories they have!
£365 for the Hero9 and the dual battery charger.
Think I would rather spend that money on a new power metre or toward new Kickr.
I'm not saying the Roubaix are fast, but they're not slow either. For a cheap tyre they have been a fantastic winter option for me and the 32mm tubeless I got I was so pleased with last summer I didn't switch them out to a lighter/thinner summer tyre, only doing that this summer. I've not switched between a summer & winter tyre for several years (was probably 25mm GP 4Seasons). The previous Roubaix 28/30 (28mm tread / 30mm volume) I rode where heavier, but the early 2015/16 tubed ones which came on my Diverge. The 32mm '2bliss' (tubeless) ones I like are the newer 2019 ones.Wow, these GatorSkin Hardthingy's feel really slow! It's only one ride and it did feel a little like I had a headwind all the time... but it also felt harder work than normal. Most segment times were pretty slow.
So, I don't mind having a few tyres for different occasionsWhat are people's recommendation for tough, but fast tyres? Maybe I should just get new GP5000's? Maybe I should try those Roubaix that Roady linked?
Yeah I'd spotted that, had really hoped them to drop in price as they dropped out the market but really the opposite has happened. With the poor camera on the FLY devices (for the price they are), the continued crazy high prices of the GoPro/latest Garmin VIRB along with the stupidly cheap and rubbish knock-offs I'm very surprised someone branded (with a good name!) hasn't come with something aimed at cycling somewhere in the middle. They can't compete with GoPro, nobody can, but there is a huge market of riders who want a 'safety' camera who buy the overpriced FLY devices.Yeah session 5 was a great little thing but even a ancient second hand one now demands about as much as you can get a Hero 8 for...
Or they're the riders who puncture a basic rubbish & cheap tyre, go to their Halfords and buy the 'best puncture proof tyre they have'.i think a lot of the positive reviews of gatorskins come from people who've gone from the £8 tyres you get on a lot of cheaper bikes. They're better than a Lugano or whatever kenda rubbish they fit.
Hmm, looking over the chart, maybe I just need to take the plunge and go tubeless with the GP5000...
But yeah, marketing.
on a mountain bike where you want to run the lowest pressures you can a lot of the time, brilliant.
On a road bike where that really isnt the case, not so. Performance benefits vs a good latex tube are marginal.
Tubeless: 1 puncture in 1.5 years.
Tubes: 5 punctures in 5 months.
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"gravel" bikes.
Yup as mentioned. As I switched to tubes after a hole (which didn't seal) I rode the tyre for a few weeks with a tube in. Then put tubed 'summer' tyres back on (GP4000 sii). I'm still carrying 2 tubes now.With tubeless, are there any options if something happens? Do you still carry a tube and switch it in, in a pinch, so to speak?
Oh the group(s) I ride with have had a couple of tubeless incidents but considering the groups are small (5-20 riders) I'd say 50% of the rides we have to stop for someone punctured. Just the roads around here are grim for rough surfaces and holes. I'd bet most are pinch flats and not debris this year, as the roads have been pretty 'clean'.All the wheel/tyre drama of anyone I ride with in the past year has been tubeless related. But yeah, marketing.
I'd argue it is, one of the huge benefits for me is running lower pressures for comfort. You can't run many road tubed tyres at 40-50 PSI.On a road bike where that really isnt the case, not so. Performance benefits vs a good latex tube are marginal.
Its not nonsense but I agree so much of it is 'trend' and marketing hype these days. Just a way of selling more bikes by making people realise what they're missing.Absolutely.
It's all nonsense.
Same way we now have "gravel" bikes. It's just a road bike. Or actualy no, it's a CX bike.... it's a lightweight aero road bike with clearance for big stupid tyres.....
People fall for this nonsense left right and centre and buy into it.
Manufacturers can't come up with anything actually new. So they take things from other bikes/other disciplines and force it into another and make everyone believe they "need" it.
They cut up just as much as the GP4000? I'd thought they'd changed the compound to make them a little tougher?I am a tubeless convert, but the GP5000 is not a winter tyre and if even you didn't puncture it would cut up rather badly after a few months of winter use.