no one here has been talking about the difference between a 230g and a 250g 
tire.  What we're talking about is the difference between a 200g tire and 
500g tire, and it is without question a perceptible difference in 
acceleration.  

On Saturday, January 4, 2014 11:52:14 AM UTC-6, Tim McNamara wrote:
>
> Unfortunately there is a  boatload of contradictory scientific evidence 
> about these sorts of thing. Most of the differences we think we perceive 
> are based on the beliefs and assumptions we have about the equipment on our 
> bikes, rather than differences we can actually perceive.  The felt 
> difference in performance between a 230 gm tire and a 250 gm tire is 
> primarily placebo effect (whereas the difference between a 230 gm tire and 
> an 800 gm tire might fall above the threshold of perceivable difference), 
> but many people will adamantly tell you they can clearly feel the 
> difference.  In a double blind test they couldn't.
>
> I remember a number of years ago when a bike magazine had a bunch of 
> otherwise identical steel frames built from a range of tubing from low end 
> to high end.  When the riders did not know which was which, they couldn't 
> tell them apart- yet thousands of published bike reviews have extolled the 
> superiority of one tube set over another, claiming dramatic differences in 
> performance.  Those difference were "perceived" based on the expectations 
> of the reviewer.  How many time have we read reviews composed of complete 
> nonsense like a frame being "stiff yet compliant?"
>
> Tim
>
>
> On Jan 4, 2014, at 7:53 AM, Ron Mc <bulld...@gmail.com <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
> Bill, again, I'm telling you it's not a personal thing - it's in our 
> wiring to recognize slight changes, especially where work is concerned.  We 
> don't feel the baseline work, what we feel is the change from the baseline 
> work.  
> Bike riders feel weight difference in wheels more than anything else, 
> because we feel the responsiveness it produces.  For racers, total weight, 
> aerodynamics (i.e. skinny tires) all add up for the slight edge that may 
> nose them ahead by the finish line.  But the rest of us know if we have 
> light wheels when we start up the hill and we know if we have efficient 
> rolling tires when we crest it.  
>
> On Friday, January 3, 2014 12:28:45 PM UTC-6, Bill Lindsay wrote:
>>
>> " It's the next subtle increment that we feel.  So yes, subtle 
>> differences in wheel inertia are more significant to us than adding mass to 
>> the bike frame.  "
>>
>> and I never once said you can't feel it.  If the small difference is a 
>> big deal to you, that's perfectly fine.  
>>
>> Do lighter wheels spin up faster?  Yes!  
>> How much faster?  A tiny bit faster.  
>> Is that tiny bit a big deal to some riders?  Absolutely
>>
>> If you can feel the difference and if you like it better then do it. 
>>  It's great.  None of us are racing or timing ourselves.  If it feels a lot 
>> faster, who cares if it isn't actually measurably a lot faster?  If it 
>> feels MUCH easier to pedal, who cares if it isn't actually measurably much 
>> easier to pedal?  
>>
>> Trust me, I'm a tires guy.  I've got ~30 pairs of spare tires in my parts 
>> bins.  Sometimes I run skinnier tires.  Why?  Because they *feel*different, 
>> and sometimes I prefer to do it.  I 
>> *feel* like it.  Sometimes I decide to run 700x25, sometimes 700x28 and 
>> sometimes 700x35.  They feel different and I run what I feel like running. 
>>  Feeling is a big deal
>>
>> I remember a similar back and forth when a vendor made a crankset in 170 
>> and 175 and refused to offer it in 172.5mm.  He emphatically stated that 
>> the reason he wouldn't do it was because it is impossible for a rider to 
>> feel the difference between 170 and 172.5.  A lot of people (including me) 
>> got kind of miffed about it.  I sure as heck can feel the difference. 
>>  Could I get used to a 170?  Sure.  But I've got 6 bikes and they all have 
>> 172.5s.  I'm not switching cranks on all my bikes, and I don't want to 
>> RE-get-used-to the bike every time I ride it.  I can feel the difference 
>> and I prefer to run 172.5.  I doubt there's a measurable performance 
>> benefit, but if somebody told me NOT to run 172.5s because it's impossible 
>> to feel the difference, I'd inform them that they are wrong.  Similarly, I 
>> am not telling you, Ron, NOT to run skinny tires.  I'm not telling you 
>> whether you can feel it or not.  I'm not telling you what you should 
>> prefer.  If I did any of that I'd be a bigger jerk than I already am.   
>>
>>
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