Jump to content

Tyre Pressures: GP 5000 vs Gatorskin Hardshell


MudLark

Recommended Posts

Hi guys,

 

Hoping somebody can give me a few quick pointers here. I have in the past normally run Continental GP 5000 tyres with a pressure of around 5bar in the front and 6bar at the back. But those tyres are expensive, not perfectly puncture resistant (is anything?) and take one heck of a beating on Johannesburg's roads, what with the poor quality of the tar in various places, bits of glass, metal and all kinds of other things. So I eventually decided to get some Gatorskin Hardshell tyres for training purposes. They have an additional 10 W rolling resistance per tyre… And trust me, today I felt every one of those additional 20 watts between the two tyres. In any event, the question I want to ask is whether I should run these Hardshell tyres at the same pressure as the GP 5000s or whether I should run them harder or softer? Any pointers would be very welcome and gratefully received.

 

Cheers,

mudlark

Edited by MudLark
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 42
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Hi mudlark, a few questions before an informed answer can be given:

 

1. What do you weigh?

2. Are you running both with tubes, or did you run the GP5000s tubeless?

3. What width tyres are running?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you Schnavel. Good points.

 

1. Weight: Around 82/83 kg, sometimes a bit less.

 

2. Both with tubes.

 

3. 28mm width.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi mudlark, a few questions before an informed answer can be given:

 

1. What do you weigh?

2. Are you running both with tubes, or did you run the GP5000s tubeless?

3. What width tyres are running?

 

Edit: I see in the time it took me to post this you replied to Schnavel.

Edited by thisismyotherbike
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think a 10w penalty is a 10w penalty.

 

I'm not sure there is a voodoo that can magically take that away unfortunately, especially if you are already around the 5 bar mark

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think a 10w penalty is a 10w penalty.

 

I'm not sure there is a voodoo that can magically take that away unfortunately, especially if you are already around the 5 bar mark

 

Jewbacca, accepted. It's not necessarily about trying to reduce the wattage loss but just trying to figure out whether tyre pressures should be in the same range or whether they should be higher or lower given the different structure of the tyre concerned. My impression is that GP 5000s are designed to run at a somewhat lower pressure whereas possibly the Hardshell tyres are not designed to run at lower pressures. Ek weet eenvoudig nie.

Edited by MudLark
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jewbacca, accepted. It's not necessarily about trying to reduce the wattage loss but just trying to figure out whether tyre pressures should be in the same range or whether they should be higher or lower given the different structure of the tyre concerned. My impression is that GP 5000s are designed to run at a somewhat lower pressure whereas possibly the Hardshell tyres are not designed to run at lower pressures. Ek weet eenvoudig nie.

hahaha

 

I think higher pressures have been shown to give kick back, so slow you down from the bumps as opposed to absorbing them.

 

I don't think any tire runs 'faster' while creating more chatter.

 

I kind of see it as a win as you get to work harder while training, then pop the 5000s on for race day and boom!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

hahaha

 

I think higher pressures have been shown to give kick back, so slow you down from the bumps as opposed to absorbing them.

 

I don't think any tire runs 'faster' while creating more chatter.

 

I kind of see it as a win as you get to work harder while training, then pop the 5000s on for race day and boom!

 

Okay, thanks. Completely different wheelsets, BTW for training and racing. Although in my case "racing" is a bit of a misnomer. It's more like "participating from the back half of the pack". :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've ridden GP4000's and Gators (25mm Clinchers) and always have them at 7 bar for training rides and 8-8.5bar for events.

There's no point in having different pressures...pick one that you find comfortable. The tyres were designed to work at the recommended operating pressure. Pump them too low and you will be absorbing every stone and shard of glass you ride over (possibly why you've been eating through tyres).

I weigh 84kgs. Lighter riders can get away with lower pressures as they induce a lower effective bearing pressure on the tyre-road contact surface. 

If you find the data and nitty gritty interesting you can play around with this site below which allows comparison of various tyres, pressures and related rolling resistance:

 

https://www.bicyclerollingresistance.com/road-bike-reviews/compare/continental-gatorskin-2015-vs-continental-grand-prix-5000-latex-tube

 


 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see that I am probably running things a bit too soft. Continental recommends 6.5 bar to 8 bar for both tyre types. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I weigh around 72kg, I ride both (25mm) gp range and gatorskin at 8 bar. Like they mentioned, a 10 W penalty is a 10 W penalty. For commuting and training rides, the gatorskins are definitely better.. special occasions I’ll pop on the Veloflex and WOW! Everything just feels so much better, but the constant thought of puncturing is exhausting. Will most likely go for the 5000 the day I can get it at a reasonable price + tubilitos, till then, gatorskins will have to do.

Edited by Edereese
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 bar is crazy hard for an already hard tyre. 90psi/6 bar is perfectly fine, even a 28mm tyre I would run at 80psi/5.5psi

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I weigh around 72kg, I ride both (25mm) gp range and gatorskin at 8 bar. Like they mentioned, a 10 W penalty is a 10 W penalty. For commuting and training rides, the gatorskins are definitely better.. special occasions I’ll pop on the Veloflex and WOW! Everything just feels so much better, but the constant thought of puncturing is exhausting. Will most likely go for the 5000 the day I can get it at a reasonable price + tubilitos, till then, gatorskins will have to do.

 

Why on earth would you run the tyres at 8 bar, especially at your weight?!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I

Why on earth would you run the tyres at 8 bar, especially at your weight?!

I honestly don’t have an answer for you. I was thinking 5,5 front and 6,5 rear, will see if I feel any difference.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Settings My Forum Content My Followed Content Forum Settings Ad Messages My Ads My Favourites My Saved Alerts My Pay Deals Help Logout