Just over 31mm wide on a Velocity Aileron.
It’s a tight, but usable fit in the Enve road fork on my v1 Salsa Colossal.
#I realize these notes seem self-indulgent, but there is remarkably little rider information shared about Salsa Colossals.
Finally, here is some press on the Teravail Lickskillet. Setup took some work, same as the Galena, the tires were hard to get mounted around the valve. Once I applied a little Irish, they popped nicely. Two layers of Stan’s tape, and an oz of Orange Seal later, and they hold air.
Measures 30mm wide at 80 psi on a 25mm wide Velocity Aileron.
Not the easiest tubeless tire to set up on a Velocity A23 with two turns of Stan’s tape. They went on too easily, and required quite a bit of the irish (remove stem cores and slam them with a shop compressor) to get the beads seated.
Each tire has 30 ml of Orange Seal and the sidewalls seem to be pretty porous, as evidenced by the soapy bubbles ;).
Originally, these were intended to be on my 2nd gen Salsa Colossal, but at a reliable 34mm measured width on both a HED C2+ and a Velocity A23, they wouldn’t comfortably fit. Now, they will ride on my Campagnolo-equipped Soma ES road+ bike, which has a bit more room.
Friday, after work, I rode with a co-worker who is better equipped, more fit, younger, and 70lbs lighter than I am.
I rolled out on a 10.5kg steel road bike with a leather saddle, and he rolls out with a BMC Road Machine on HED Stinger wheels.
You’re killing me, Paul.
Next ride, I’ll take my Colossal. Not any lighter, but a bit more pro. I’ve been riding this bike on the trainer, in a vain attempt at building some fitness before Land Run 100. Which, naturally, got me to thinking about changes.
Some things, like the lever position on the bars, are things I never got right during the rebuild. Others, like the Wickwerks chainrings, are because SRAM front shifts suck butt.
Please join us at Zipline Brewing on Saturday, February 4th from 1-5.
It’s for a good cause, and I’m gonna bring a lot of swag to sell/trade.
2 nights, 2 days Amtrak Lincoln (LNK) to Holdrege (HLD) ($36.00 one-way) load bicycle on train, arrive in Holdrege at 03:00, nap, have breakfast, and depart at first light. Ride 81 miles to Twin Oaks Motel in Clay Center, NE on Day 1, ride 88 miles to Lincoln on Day 2.
I’d pop my Salsa Colossal onto the train in Lincoln, and stuff a little gear into a bag, and ride back home on gravel and paved roads.
**update** this wont work, Amtrak loads bicycles as luggage, which is available in Lincoln, but unloading luggage is not available in Holdrege. I had an opportunity to speak with the conductor in Lincoln about this. Damn.
These are fat! 27mm measured width at 80 psi and 28mm at 95 psi on a Pacenti PL-23 hoop.
On my 1996 Bianchi Repart Corse TSX, they’re a tight fit. I had to back the rear dropouts out all the way, such as it was.
Test inflation pressures: 80/95 f/r.
Update: the first test ride ended badly with a small sidewall pinhole that didnt seal before I went out. I got to walk 😐
It fits, amiright?
Details: Schwalbe One (v1) 700x25c on Pacenti PL-23 (18c) rim, 95 psi.