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pinches, if you are prepared to push it a little around the corners, experiment at your current pressure then try dropping 40psi plus and if you can't tell the difference you are not pushing hard enough!
this should help.
RealMan - Member
Eh? 8.5 stone rider squirming tyres at 60psi?
Yes.. 60psi on a road bike feels horrible.
You are 8.5 stone too? 🙄 Oh, hang on, you are 12 and probably are... 😛
Steve-Austin - Member
112.5 rear
107.5 frontI might go down 6% if the roads are wet
*glee*
Why would you pump up your tyres then wait a few days before trying them ? 😕
try them straight away, I'm assuming you live near a road.
i weigh 77kg, i've got 25mm tyres on my road bike.
the rear gets 85ish psi, the front gets 75ish psi.
yes, i could go higher, but my teeth fell out the last time i tried it - sheffield roads are terrible.
Loving the people saying what's right and wrong. Was that a chart telling us what the pressure should be? Crazy!
To those people who aren't sure, most of us who don't refer to a chart experiment until we find what suits us best. I'd recommend taking a smilar approach. Try your tyres soft and hard, you'll notice differences with both, some of which will suit you and some which won't.
HTH.
13 stone and run about 110psi front and back.
ahwiles - Member
i weigh 77kg, i've got 25mm tyres on my road bike.the rear gets 85ish psi, the front gets 75ish psi.
yes, i could go higher, but my teeth fell out the last time i tried it - sheffield roads are terrible.
More or less this. I may lose 0.00043% top speed but I can still keep up on the chain gangs - proper fast chain gangs with 1st cats on them 😡
lol what are you saying mr cynic ( how dare you roll your eyes at me hahahhhHha..... yes im 8.5 stone....not bad weight for my age... i guess i could be a tad lighter but then i wud be a stick insect and i dont want that...lol
going to keep with 80 psi... does this mean i will go faster ...yipeeeee.... yeah its all about experimenting.... i do that with the MTB..... only roady bikes its all a new ball game... 😉
good to get feedback.... 😉
Usually go on 100 - 110 psi for speedy road riding and commuting/winter slow riding 90-100 - 71 Kg here 🙂
Elaine-anne, thats 2 posts now where you have opened up brackets but not closed them. Its this button .... ) 🙂
its worth noting that the gauges on pumps are pretty pish when it comes to accuracy. I'd not be surprised (based on experiance) to see 10-15% off.. good for checking its the same 'as how you had it', but not great for forums
(15psi on the mtb, 85 on the road bike. 13 stone)
"8.5 stone"-flame-gate was directed at "Real"man.
At 8.5 stone running 100 psi will feel like running solid wooden tyres!
Unless you're racing try around 70 to 80 psi and have a comfy ride.
Usual macho crap in abundance advice so far. :-
Edit: If your running 60 psi with no ill effects don't worry.
^sanest post in this thread.
10 and a bit stone, 23c's 95 rear/85 front drop them 5psi for the pavé
a high tpi and the right pressure for the carcass means good grip (and less rolling resistance) overinflating does nothing to improve speed or comfort.
so much crap written about tyres
best read this to dispel all the myths
[url= http://www.sheldonbrown.com/tires.html ]http://www.sheldonbrown.com/tires.html[/url]
5lab..... no way you put 15 psi in your MTB....get a grip lad... 😉 
I use about 115psi for road riding but my TT tyres ger run at 150psi
I'm about 12.5 stone, 23mm tyres and I usually have about 100 in the front and 110 in the rear. I'll maybe let a bit out if it might be a bit slippery.
If they're much lower it does feel slower but I wonder how much of this is in the mind. On the Dartmoor Classic this year I noticed the front had gone down to 70 at the second feed stop, I got it back up to 110 but the knowledge that it was going down relatively quickly made it seem quite draggy for the last leg.
15psi 😯
I assume there's no riding just tyres rolling off rims/snakebites etc?
I'm 12 stone and run my 23c at 115psi (or thereabouts). With modern frame design, materials and manufacture, there's no reason a bike should be uncomfortable at those sorts of pressures. I reckon the whingers are either riding crappy old iron or are just too soft.
weight in kg=0.atmospheres.or weight divided by ten=atm.
drop half an atm in the front.
go down 1-2 atm. when it rains.
my first bike mechanic told me that.
feeling fast usually means its too high.
12 stone here, put 100psi front & rear on the road bike, and 25/30 psi F/R on the MTB.
1 stone - 6.35 kg
1 atm - 14.69 psi
gone as low as 50psi,as high as 200psi..95/105 feels about right for 69-70kg.
gone as low as 50psi,as high as 200psi..95/105 feels about right for 69-70kg
200psi!?!? Do you have any fillings left? Not to mention sperm count...gulp 😯
eh lol @ 200 psi ahhahah 😯 giant tyres then about to explode ? 
I think the rims would break at the sidewall before the tyres exploded..cartoon style.
I don't reccomend it.that's all I've got to say about it..
There is at least some sensible stuff on here about not running too high pressures amongst the macho men suggesting pumping tyres up as hard as they'll go. For those racing who're pumping the tyres up harder, but then noticing the vibration and thinking that's a sign of going faster, you should read that Sheldon Brown article, which includes the following line:
In practice, riding surfaces aren't perfectly smooth, and overinflation actually increases rolling resistance, due to vibration.
I used to pump the tyres on my TT bike up to ~150psi (20mm tubs), but more recently have been running as low as 110 having realised that very high pressures are counter-productive.