The Road-ish Riv Rubber Radius thread got me thinking about PSI adjustments 
while on longer rides.  Last month I rode my 56cm 650b Atlantis from San 
Francisco to Olema via Mt. Tam and the Bolinas Ridge Fire Trail (which was 
about 13 miles and our main gravel section of the day) and back to SF via 
Samuel P. Taylor and Fairfax.  A glorious 75 mile-ride (80% road/20%gravel) 
with 6000 ft of climbing on a perfectly sunny, temperate day.  We stopped 
at Pantoll Station midway to the top of Mt. Tam and made coffee and had 
some decadent pastries and smoked salmon.  Everything was 
perfect.....except for one five mile stretch at the end of the Bolinas 
Ridge Fire Trail.  A "relentless descent" characterized by obstinate cows, 
hard-packed dirt that could only be described as rutted washboard, and lots 
of time spent death-gripping my TRP brake levers on my newly mounted 666mm 
Crust Towel Rack bars.  Once past this stretch, the ride returned to its' 
earlier glory and we headed home through idyllic Marin County.  A great day 
of mixed-terrain riding.  In retrospect, though, I can't help but think 
that I could have avoided the unpleasantness of that 5-mile descent had I 
just thought to lower my PSI before getting on the fire trail.  Being that 
the first half of the ride and the final 35% of the ride would be on the 
road, I started (and finished) my day out at 42 PSI on my 48mm Rene Herse 
Switchback Hill Endurance tires.  Now I'm kicking myself for not lowering 
the pressure significantly.  And I figured that this would be a good place 
to ask for others' experience with mid-ride PSI changes.  Is this something 
that folks do regularly or are y'all more inclined to choose a PSI that 
will work on mixed terrain?  And if frequent PSI changes are the norm, what 
pumps are your favorites?  Since most (?) Riv-Riders seem to be almost 
obsessed with bags as they are with their bikes (I rode with my Fabios 
Chest L on this particular day) I figure that pump size is not as important 
as pump efficiency. 
Thanks for your consideration.
Alex

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