Thursday, 24 May 2012

What size of wheel and tyre is used on my bicycle ? Choosing the right size of tyres for your bike can be difficult due to competing methods of measurement.

47-406: A "20 inch" tyre.
47 mm wide, mounts on a 406 mm rim
Bicycle tyres come in a bewildering array of different sizes. It's absolutely vital to buy the correct size for your bike.

While tyres are mostly made of rubber, the most important dimension when fitting is that of the bead of the tyre, and this is reinforced either with steel wire (for most tyres) or with glass or other fibres (for folding tyres) so that the tyre won't stretch and come off the rim when fully inflated.

For this reason, bicycle tyres do not stretch and even sizes which are very close in size are not interchangeable.

Old fashioned ways of labeling tyres
In the past, wheel sizes were usually described as the outer diameter of the size of the wheel including a nominal inflated tyre. In countries which used imperial units these would be expressed as a size in inches (e.g. "26 inch" or "28 inch") while in metric countries the size was expressed in millimetres (e.g. 700 C or 650 A).

ETRTO 40-559 = 40 mm wide 559 mm
diameter rim. Also labeled 26x1.50 but
you are best off ignoring this old "size"
This system would work just fine if each size of wheel was described by a different number. However, that was not so. As an example, the "26 inch" wheel size used on traditional British bicycles is a lot larger than the "26 inch" wheel size used on traditional American bikes. British bikes were for many years imported to the USA, and when Mountain Bikes became popular, they brought the American wheel size to the UK. What's more, there are more "26 inch" wheel sizes than just these two.

There are also two different sizes of "28 inch" wheel, one of which is larger and the other smaller than the "27 inch" size. "29 inch" wheeled mountain bikes actually use the same diameter rim as the smaller "28 inch" size, so these two use smaller wheels than "27 inch".

The same problems arise with smaller wheels as well. The two most commonly used "16 inch" wheel sizes are both considerably smaller than 16 inches in diameter. The largest of the two measures just over 13.5 inches in diameter, while the smaller is nearly 2 inches smaller than this. There are also several different wheel sizes referred to "20 inch".

The metric versions of these measurements also cause confusion. A 700 C wheel is not the same size as a 700 B wheel but it is the same as one of the "28 inch" sizes, even though it's neither 700 mm nor 28 inch in diameter.

Inevitably, there is much confusion about wheel sizes.

The solution: ETRTO numbers
The most common size for Dutch town bikes and many touring
bikes. A 622 mm diameter rim with a 37 mm wide tyre
In 1964, the European Tyre and Rim Technical Organisation was formed. They're an organisation that few people have heard of, and I know little of what they've been doing for the last 50 years except that they've given cyclists a great gift in the form of a system for identifying tyre and wheel sizes which guarantees compatibility. This has been standardized internationally in the form of ISO 5775, but most people still refer to these figures as "ETRTO numbers".

The "ETRTO number" consists of two numbers separated by a dash. The first gives the width of the tyre, while the second gives the diameter of the rim which it fits. For instance, 37-622 indicates that a tyre has a width of 37 mm and is to be mounted on a rim of 622 mm diameter. This is the most common size for Dutch town bikes, and is also a common size for touring bikes everywhere.

Buying a replacement tyre
Before buying a replacement tyre, inner tube or wheel, first check the writing on the side of your existing tyre and find the ETRTO number. To help you find an exact match which will work on your bike, all the tyres and inner tube as well as the wheels in our web shop are listed with their available ETRTO sizes.

You do not always have to buy the same width of tyre as you had before. While it is not a good idea to fit a very wide tyre onto a very narrow rim, nor a very narrow tyre onto a very wide rim, in principle any tyre of any width will fit on any rim which is the correct size. In practice we suggest not going too far from what the manufacturer of your bicycle fitted. For example, if you currently have 32 mm wide tyres, then fitting a 37 mm wide tyre instead will likely give a bit more comfort. However, make sure you have enough clearance in the frame and under mudguards for a larger tyre size.

Recommended tyres and sizes for different types of bikes
Below we make some recommendations for some types of bikes. We supply a much wider range of tyres than this, so if you need a different size, please check all of what we have, and contact us if you need a size which isn't listed

You should always make reference to the ETRTO number on the side of your existing tyres before buying any tyre. Please take our recommendation, but confirm that these are the exact tyres you want by checking your tyre size yourself before ordering. If you are changing the width of the tyre that you use, make sure you have a new width that will work on your rims and in your frame:

Type of bikeTyre sizeOld sizeRecommendation with link to where to buy
British Three Speed37-59026"Marathon Plus, Marathon, Delta Cruiser
New Dutch town bike37-62228x1 3/8Marathon, Marathon Plus, Delta Cruiser
"Old" Dutch town bike40-63528x1 1/2Marathon, Marathon Plus, Delta Cruiser
Modern touring bike28-622 to 37-62228" / 700CMarathon Plus, Marathon, Marathon Supreme
Racing bike20-622 to 28-62228" / 700CDurano / Durano S, Contact Speed, Grand Prix
Old racing bike20-630 to 32-63027x1 1/4Marathon
Mountain bike47-559 to 55-55926"Furious Fred, Marathon Winter, Big Apple
Mountain bike used on road32-559 to 50-55926"Big Apple, Contact Speed, Kojak, Marathon, Marathon Plus
20" wheel folding bike28-406 to 47-40620"Kojak, Marathon, Marathon Plus
16" wheel folding bike28-305 to 47-30516"Marathon, Marathon Plus
Brompton / Moulton35-34916"Marathon, Marathon Plus
Kronan54-584 or 47-62226" / 28"Kronan tyres
(Kronan men's and women's frames are different)

Profile
It is not possible for a bicycle tyre to "aquaplane" because speeds are too low, and pressures are too high. Therefore, a profile is not needed on bicycle tyres to increase grip in the wet.

Top to bottom. Speed & good grip: Kojak
Everyday use and touring: Marathon
Ice and Snow: Marathon Winter
When on a hard surface (concrete, asphalt), grip comes from the tyre deforming over small sharp edges in the surface, not from the surface deforming to fit the tyre, for this reason, a complete slick tyre provides all the grip you need on such a surface. What's more, a tyre which has a tread pattern will generally have a higher rolling resistance due to deforming of the tyre as you ride along. For this reason, a completely slick tyre (like the Kojak) would serve most people well most of the time.

However, tread on a tyre is useful in some circumstances. If you sometimes ride on unfinished paths, mud, sand and snow, then a slight tread pattern is useful because the surface will then deform around the tread and provide extra grip. It is for this reason (as well as that new tread patterns look good in marketing materials) that most general purpose tyres have a slight tread.

A more extreme tread pattern is needed for more extreme circumstances. Those who do cross country riding or mountain biking on rough paths benefit from an aggressive tread, and of course this becomes more extreme in examples such as the Marathon Winter which go as far as having metal studs to pierce through ice.

Tyre Pressures
It is important to maintain correct tyre pressures. While it can be It is more common that people run their tyres at too low a pressure than too high. If the pressure is too low then too much of your energy goes into deforming the tyre as you cycle, and this makes cycling considerable less efficient.

If you can easily deform a tyre with your fingers then it is almost certainly under-inflated. All bicycle tyres run at higher pressures than car tyres, and car pumps are often not capable of achieving high enough pressures for a bicycle.

Racing bike tyre with "French" 700x23C
description alongside ETRTO
Narrower tyres need higher pressure than wider tyres. The racing bike tyre on the left has a recommended pressure between 6 and 10 bar (85 to 145 psi), while a wider mountain bike tyre may need just 2 to 3 bar (30 to 45 psi).

Narrow tyres may damaged quite quickly by too low a pressure, while some tyres (notably the Schwalbe Marathon) have been reformulated to make them more resistant to damage due to low pressure.

For everyday use, a thumb test (if you can deform the side-wall of the tyre with your thumb, pump it up) is enough for most people. However, we also stock the very good Schwalbe digital air pressure tester for people who want to make sure their tyres are at a suitable pressure. We also sell a range of pumps suitable for getting your tyres to a suitable pressure.

Note that with tyres with puncture resistant layers, like the Marathon Plus, if you try to test the pressure by squeezing the running surface of the tyre, all you'll "test" is how soft the anti-puncture layer is. It's important to do this on the sides of the tyre, squeezing between thumb and forefinger.

22 comments:

  1. For more extensive reference after this introduction, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_5775 has a comprehensive list of comparison between old and new markings.

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  2. Really nice article! Thanks a lot!

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  3. Great article! Thanks!

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  4. superbly clarifying the mystical murky quagmire of tire sizes. Every bike shop should offer a printout version of this!
    thanks.

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  5. You mention the Kronan tyre being 57-584 in this article and it links to the page in which it says that the 54-584 is the correct tyre. Which is correct?

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    1. Well spotted ! The correct size is 54-584 and you can buy the Kronan tyres here. In fact the width is not so critical. A 57 mm wide tyre would also work on the rim, as would a tyre which was a little narrower.

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  6. Yes, a good article. Now I need to order a set of 54-584 for my man's Kronan, but what would be the inner tube sizing to order with them? Greetings from New Zealand by the way.

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    1. If you refer to the web page for Kronan tyres, this tells you to buy a Schwalbe SV, AV or DV19 inner tube. All three are the same size and as recommended by Schwalbe for the Kronan tyre. Which version you choose depends on your choice of inner tube:

      DV = Dunlop valve - traditional removeable bike valve
      AV = Schrader car type valve
      SV = Presta (high pressure) narrow racing cycle type value

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  7. Thanks for this... I jumped in -blind- to a tire purchase last weekend and got a little singed by sizing. Idiotically, when I think how I changed my bike's tires (I went from a fat'n'flabby factory-fitted to some sleek Schwalbe Marathon Plus tires 37-622... good grief, the sheer d r i v e I get from these!). I bought my wife's Dutch bike a replacement back wheel and had only looked at the '26 x 1.50' markings on the existing weathered tire wall. I didn't think to check the OTHER measurement which finished '-580'.

    So now I have a spare 26" Marathon Plus. It's laughably tiny in comparison. No problems. I'll flow it to a mate...

    Which is fair enough - but this existing measurement of '580'. Can I get away with '584'? I'd like to buy equivalent Schwalbe (or Continental) armoured tires. Can you advise please?

    Thanks again...

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    1. Anonymous: Are you sure that your old tyres are 580 and not 590 ? I've never seen a 580, but 590 is quite common.

      You'll almost certainly have no success in trying to use a 584 tyre on a 580 rim. I suspect it won't even keep the inner tube in. On a 590 rim it's probably almost impossible to fit and certainly won't run evenly.

      But if the rim size is really 590 then the Marathon Plus 590 is probably perfect for you. It's listed above together with a link to buy it.

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  8. Ach! - thanks for the swift response. Yes, the more I looked at the Wiki link (kindly provided here) the more I realised it's got to be 40-590 (so I could drop that to a 37-590, yes?). Thanks again and sorry for the confusion.

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  9. The first number is just the width, so yes that should cause no problem. It's only a 3 mm difference - probably not visible at all.

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  10. It's great to know there are good quality replacement tyres out there for a Kronan, but I'm desperate for new wheel rims. Does anyone know of anywhere I could get them? The rear one just split on me, and I'm struggling to find anything which doesn't make the bike look weird with smaller and thinner rims.

    Thanks in advance,
    Glenn

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  11. Glenn: Unfortunately we can't rims or wheels in the Kronan 584 mm size. However we can get them in the somewhat more common 590 size. These are only 3 mm greater in radius so should work just fine in a Kronan frame, especially if fitted with a very slightly less wide tyre.

    The 590 size is the British 26 inch size. I'm guessing that you've tried the American 26 inch size, which has a diameter of just 559 mm. This would indeed look very odd in the Kronan frame.

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    1. David, thank-you very much. I'll get a matching pair of the 590's ordered. Thank-you!

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  12. Can I use 622 wheels instead of 635 for my dutch bicycle? Or will look strange?

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    1. You can fit 622 size wheels and tyres in a frame built for 635 size wheels. The difference in radius is only 6.5 mm, which isn't so much, but as the tyres fitted on 622 size rims are usually a little narrower, the difference can be enough to look a bit odd. Expect 10 - 15 mm greater gap between the tyres and mudguard than you have now. Also that your bottom bracket will be that distance closed to the ground.

      If you use hub brakes (this includes back pedal brakes) then this is a perfectly safe substitution. Note that brakes which operate against the wheel rim probably will not line up correctly on a 622 size rim fitted in a frame for 635 size.

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  13. David,thank you very much!

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  14. Could you tell me please what would be the ideal inner tube for a 37/622 tyre for the best puncture resilience? I would be putting them where originally a 40/622 tyre was.

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    1. Zaroff: There's no significant difference in puncture resistance of inner tubes. To prevent punctures you need a puncture proof tyre. I recommend the Schwalbe Marathon+ for maximum puncture resistance. The correct size inner tube for a 37-622 tyre is an AV/SV/DV17 (choose depending on the valve type that you prefer). If you buy new inner tubes with the new tyres you'll almost certainly never have to repair a puncture in them.

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    2. Thank you for your time.

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