Thanks for the input!

I will definately play around with pressure.  I dropped the pressure again, 
without measuring, and the tire was bottoming out so I checked and it was 
at 20 psi.  I aired it up to 35 psi and rode a little bit and it felt 
better.  I'll try going to max pressure as well and see what happens. 

I was very surprised because after years of reading about the magic of RH 
tires, I was expecting a dreamy ride.  I do recall reading people talking 
about the fatter RH tires having a small sweet spot of pressure  for bounce 
vs cush, but I don't recall discussions of the actual handling.  

On Saturday, June 12, 2021 at 11:28:57 AM UTC-5 [email protected] wrote:

> What kind of noise are the tires making? Like a rubber skooching on a 
> slick floor sound? 
> The closest to the Antelope Hill that I've ridden is the Switchback Hill, 
> which is 650b x 48mm. I've had them on three bikes over the years and would 
> regularly pump them up to around 45-50psi once a month and not top off for 
> another month so by the time I remembered to reinflate they would be down 
> to around 20psi. This was in part due to negligence, but was also sort of a 
> running experiment to see how the bike handled at different tire pressures. 
> I didn't keep very good notes during this highly scientific study, but I do 
> remember that by the 3 week mark the bike would dive into turns in a real 
> scary way, perhaps something like you're experiencing with the self-steer. 
> At higher pressures I never felt any handling anomalies, but maybe that's 
> because I tended towards higher pressures. 
> Have you considered bumping up to 50-55 psi? I imagine what you're feeling 
> is that big ol' tire flopping over onto its side, bumping the steering one 
> way or the other. My last Switchback Hill bike had 55mm rims and the think 
> tracked like a freight train with no tire flop at all. 
> Best of luck! 
> On Saturday, June 12, 2021 at 7:48:55 AM UTC-7 Chris L wrote:
>
>> I just put a set of 55mm Antelope Hill tires on a set of Dyad rims and 
>> installed them on my Hunqapillar.  
>>
>> The tires, at slower speeds, have a TON of self-steer and in anything 
>> other than a straight line, they are LOUD.   
>>
>> Riding on a 3' wide sidewalk, just slightly turning the handlebar results 
>> in the very loud sound of the tires.  Is this something that decreases as 
>> the tires get broken in?  I assume it's one of the tread patterns  that may 
>> be more "grippy" to help in turns. 
>>
>> The self steering is awful.  I'm talking worse than a 1984 mountain bike 
>> with Repack geometry.  
>>
>> I started the tires at 40-45 psi, which as a 380 lb rider, is where I 
>> generally run tires this size.  During the ride, I lowered the pressure on 
>> the front a little, but didn't notice any appreciable difference.  
>>
>> I've run 38mm tires and two sets of 50mm + tires on the Hunq and never 
>> experienced self steering at any level.
>>
>>
>>

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