Tubulars: Art, Science, and Ritual

As Keepers Tour crossed from dream to reality and routes over the cobblestones of Northern Europe were sketched out, with it came the familiar tingling in my fingertips and uneasy sensation at the base of my spine as my mind starts its irrevocable journey towards categorizing as mandatory an unnecessary indulgence. I was going to need a wheelset and tubular tires that were up to the job.

The folklore goes a long way towards that justification; Paris-Roubaix is the race where every trick of the trade is exploited to deliver riders safely to the finish. Equipment which usually carries riders for a season or more finds itself in the trash heap after a single day on in Hell – maybe good enough for training but certainly not be trusted for another race. Special wheels are built, and only the strongest tubulars are glued to the rims. Aldo Gios, De Vlaeminck’s mechanic, is said to have aged his tires in his wine cellar to allow the rubber to harden, making them more resistent to punctures.

Ignoring the possibility that there may be some difference in strength, speed, or skill with which the Pros ride over the Cobbles, it didn’t take me long to determine that it wasn’t so much a matter of wanting a set of tubulars for Keepers Tour, but that it was indeed my obligation. I have a responsibility, after all, to the attendees of trip that I not fall off my machine and bash my head open on a cobblestone. Messy, certainly, but it may also frame the event in a somewhat negative light, and I think we’d all like the opportunity to do this again some time. The only way to assure I don’t suffer some catastrophic equipment failure and jeopardize the trip was to build a set of wheels based on the same components the Pros select for the purpose, and line them in the same rubber they choose. Logical, really.

The seduction of symbols was the first phase, followed quickly by the art of building wheels. The final step was to procure the right tires for the job. FMB is perhaps the most revered name in hand-made tubular tires; inspection of photos of Roubaix will reveal the pale yellow or green sidewalls of the FMB Paris-Roubaix tire on many of the wheels bouncing over the cobbles – often rebadged on order to satisfy sponsorship obligations.

I needed a set, naturally.

The tires were ordered in December, as from January onward Francois (of Francois-Marie Boyaux from which FMB takes its name) becomes overburdened with orders from the teams riding Roubaix and indicated he wouldn’t have time to squeeze in an order from a nobody such as myself. They arrived in February, at which point they displaced a few bottles of wine to age in the darkest corner of our basement which doubles as our wine cellar. Having mounted another set of tubs on the wheels in order to bash the bejezus out of the wheels so as to make myself a little less certain that I buggered the wheel building process, they had to wait until this past week to be mounted.

They have not yet been ridden, but they certainly look the business.

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Gluing on a tubular tire is a glorious study in patience and settles beautifully in the intersection between art, science, and ritual. And the glue smells distressingly fantastic.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Gluing Tubs/”/]

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • Those FMB tubulars are sweet! Probably what these were copied from:


    Made by Wobler, branded as Michelin. Interesting thing is they have 60mm valve stems.

  • Quick update on my tubs journey. Bought my first set of tubs in years about two months ago and rode them for around a month and really fell in love with them and just thought that they were soooo much better than my clinchers. Then my tubular wheelset was squished by an SUV and I had to switch back to clinchers. The ride felt rougher but I thought maybe I was just waxing romantic about the tubs and that there really might not be that much difference. Finally got my tubs back this weekend after they were rebuilt with new rims and HOLY MOLY, they are like butter compared to the clinchers. Rode my normal route on them and there truly is no comparison, the tubs just feel the road so much better and offer such a smoother ride, unbelievable. So, if you are debating tubs for your next wheelset at all, in my opinion, there really is only one choice, and there is no way that you will regret it. Even with the extra "work" of tubs, they are soooo worth it.

  • @Buck Rogers
    Good to hear you've got them back.

    I can't really imagine going back to clinchers having spent a month or so on tubs. The clinchers were quite heavy and had generic cheapo hubs and rims whilst the tubs are a nemesis dura-ace combo so the improvement isn't all down to the tubs but the whole feel is just so much more special. I can't actually imagine a better upgrade.

  • @Chris
    I have a decent set of clinchers. I have been riding Mavic Ksyrium SL Premium's and they have been great, but they are just no comparison to my HED C2 Belgium's with Chris King R45 hubs and 27mm Vit Pave tubs.

  • I've no doubt decent clinchers are great but I'm perfectly happy with my tubs. I'm also completely aware that I haven't experienced some of the more negative aspects of tubular ownership and my current view point may change rapidly when I do.

  • What do you do when you get a flat while riding tubs? Can you patch in the field like a clincher/tube, or do you have to carry a spare under your seat?

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