You bring up good points.

1. Higher mass will slow you down climbing, but the question is how much. 
Realistically, the differences are very small. We tested a 650B randonneur 
bike with 42 mm tires against a titanium road bike with 25s. Both were 
excellent bikes, and their speed was the same. Clearly, the difference in 
weight got lost among other, more important factors.

2. Yes, sidewall deformation is an issue - that is the start of the 
sidewall collapse under high cornering loads. That is why you need to run 
slightly higher pressures with supple tires. Even at those higher 
pressures, the supple tires are much faster and more comfortable.

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly
www.bikequarterly.com

On Tuesday, June 14, 2016 at 2:33:20 PM UTC-7, Lungimsam wrote:
>
> 1. What does the higher mass do in regards to climbing? Help or hinder?
>
> I wonder at what point the mass is nullified by hysteresis, s-losses, and 
> planing, supple tires, etc.? One could do alot of mixed variables tests to 
> see how it all shakes out.
>
> 2. Also, what about tire sidewall deformation under the force of the rim 
> turning?
>
> Wouldn't a supple tire's sidewalls deform more, lagging behind the rim to 
> a point, though the bead stays in place, resulting in slower response and 
> drag? 
>
>

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