Categories: Reverence

Reverence? Tubs

Photo: rivieracycles

We can mimic the pros in many ways; kit, bikes, shaving our legs. Even if we’ll never ride like them, we can try (mostly in vain) to look like them. We’ll buy a piece of equipment because our favourite pro endorses it, or even adopt trends that the peloton have, such as alloy classic bend bars, slamming a 140mm stem, or putting those plastic sticky things across the bridge of our noses (yep, I actually did this in the mid 90’s when Tinker Juarez was rocking them on the mtb World Cup circuit. It didnt help a bit, and I looked like a twat). There are many pro traits that are certainly frowned upon and should never be attempted, like wearing the rainbow bands or maillot jaune. Then there are things we would love to be able to do, like snort cocaine with 18 yo models, but there’s as much chance of that as Cav finishing the Vuelta. And finally, there’s things that we can do, but are probably too cautious or conservative to do.

Like running tubs.

We know that every pro bike has the tyres glued to the rims, but how many of us actually own a set of tubs?  How many would like to own a set? How many get the fear of Merckx put up them at the mere thought of getting caught miles from home with a flat? Ok, I hear you say, they’re only for racing, but how many of us are good enough to benefit from the reduced chance of a pinch flat on the cobbles, or the decreased rolling resistance from a 100 gram weight saving? I’m not seeing many hands… anyone, anyone? But still, I want some!

I’ve been on a mission to find a light set of wheels for Il Profetta, and scouring eBay and TradeMe has coughed up quite a few sets of tubs. Some going pretty cheap too. Several times I’ve been poised to push the ‘buy now’ button, but like a kid too scared to jump into the river from the highest bridge in town, I keep pulling back from the edge. It’s like, I might hit the water wrong and break my neck, but probably won’t. At worst, my shorts might fall down while scrabbling back up the bank to dry land, with the other kids pointing and laughing. It’s a risk I’m not willing to take. Clinchers are like having extra-strong elastic in the trunks, plus a drawstring for back up. Tubs on a punter’s bike are like a pair of Speedos on a fat bastard.

Just as I was ready to give up the idea of tubs altogether, we received an impassioned email out of the blue from an enthusiastic sew-up fan going by the moniker of “Tubolari”. He suggested in no uncertain terms that it was less than hardcore to ride clinchers or even to use tyre levers to remove them. The most surprising thing was, he wasn’t a grizzled old Italian mechanic or former Belgian domestique, but has only been riding for a year. Is it merely a case of wet-behind-the-ears zeal, or is he onto something? Should we all be digging out under the house and storing a stash of tubulars in there to age them? Let’s see…

Tubolari’s reasons for riding tubulars:

  1. You get to say you ride tubulars with a smug grin.
  2. It is an appropriate procedure to simply ask for tubulars in determining whether or not a bike shop is a REAL bike shop even if you don’t plan on buying tubulars.
  3. Tubulars are generally relegated to the lightly used sections of a store thus making you more hardcore because you need to blow dust off of the packaging just to read the specs that you’ve already read online.
  4. Personally, I use tape (Velox Jantex 76 Competition tubular tape) and that pretty much takes the hassle out of it. I think though, it makes me less hardcore than those who use glue.
  5. I love it when a machine breaks (tubbie flats), it shows that a machine is just as vulnerable as a human. I love to bring my machine back to working order like a doctor. It also gives me a reason to don my Campy cap and sing Italian tunes like in Breaking Away.
  6. Subjective qualities:
    1.  I take a corner at speed with tubs (Gommitalia Challenge $30 a pop) and feel the bump (I begin to panic) but the tubbies have already deflected around the rock and I’m safe, I grin and press on.
    2. I take a corner at speed with clinchers (Continental Grand Prix 3000, $75 a pop) and feel the the bump (I begin to panic) and jump about what feels like half  a foot sideways (I check my shorts, they are dry), I press on.
  7. I joined a charity ride as a volunteer (ride guide), I am the official tubular tire repair/changer mechanic and get my own car, walky talky and office. The office I use will be for participants to drop off their tires and wheels for spares so I can SAG them on the ride. Not bad for starting road biking last year right?
  8. Piling spare tubs in your jersey gives others a conversation piece when on tours with your local club.
  9. Merckx rode tubulars so it seems only fitting ;).
  10. Tubulars are like wine, you like some, you don’t like others. Some go well with Steel and some go well with Carbon Fiber.

Some compelling points for sure, and it’s hard to argue with his passion. Or is it? Keeper Gianni loves an argument, and can refute the strongest of opinions with a sneer, or just by hitting the reply button;

Yeah, yeah, senor Tubolari,  talk to me in a year when you have peeled off, opened up, patched, re-sewn, re-glued, and re-glued more a bunch of tubolaris. Sure you may get laid more often riding tubulars, but trying to get a girl’s bra off with all that tubasti glue on your mitts is tough.
I’ve done my time with them and moved on, tubless road clinchers is where I’m heading, the great beyond. Come with me.
Cheers, Gianni

Think I’m gonna sit on the fence on this one for a while longer, and leave my pro tyre-emulation to these or these for now…

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • @Cyclops

    BTW, is it just me or does anybody else think Sidi's commercials are pretty stupid?

    It's not just you. That same ad over and over just kills me. It sucked the first time I saw it. It still sucks 500 viewings later.

  • I'm just being an ARP. I only ride my tubs at races and important rides. Otherwise it's the convenience of clinchers for me.

  • @Gianni

    @Jeff in PetroMetro


    Everyone should descend on a pair of sew-ups that they themselves glued. DESCEND AT LUDICROUS SPEED. Nothing quite gives you a sense of accomplishment like gluing on your sew-ups, descending on them, and not dying from a rolled tire.

    That's what I'm talking about! That's the proper test of your glue job. Putting your tires where your face is?

    ...and not your face where your tires are. ;)

  • @Ron
    Mid-Atlantic where? This will be my rookie CX season as well. Live in VA and will be hitting most of the MABRA Super 8 races.

  • grumble & Gianni - Hmm, I picked up my CX bike from a riding pal. Pretty positive he used these wheels to race last year, ran them tubeless. I thought he told me to go tubeless in-season so that I could run them at lower pressure. These Mavic rims don't have open spoke holes (in case you didn't know) and the Hutchinson tires are tubeless ready too. My buddy suggests it, but he's also the one telling me I need Reynolds carbon wheels...guy works in the industry so gets everything free or at a steep discount. Damn him, thinks we all can have the best stuff!

    Now I'm really confused.

    grumble - No cash in the cookie jar for a tubular wheelset for the cross bike. Just spent too much on the bike itself. Heck, I figure I'll have enough trouble not bashing my face, tire choice is low on my list of considerations.

    And as for this whole discussion, heck my race reading skills could help me out a lot more than tire choice. I'm sticking with clinchers. And a bunch of other stuff aside from tires. Oh, and I don't road race, just fast group rides. So there is that to consider.

    Cyclops - Booyah, as Dave Zabriskie would say! "I'm Idaho State Champ, baby!"
    http://davezabriskie.com/?p=500

  • Brett,

    It just dawned on me, I use the same toothbrush that's in your picture. But I brush my teeth with it. Small world.

  • Racing on tubs is superior, especially crits. The rule changes in cross practically mandate tubular use on any course with properly difficult conditions and surfaces. A U-shaped 32mm clincher on even a 23mm rim isn't anything on a perfectly round tub at a full bar less pressure.

    I enjoy gluing a tire. I get tough enough tires to train on them. They feel amazing, and no one would know the difference other than you--unlike other attempts at PRO-emulative vanity.

  • Ahhh tubulars. Back in the day I had some nice Clement Criterium tubs on my special TT wheels. (24 spoke, Mavic rims with Royce Racing hubs.)Stuck them on with some nasty red glue crap. They did sing pretty sweet at 150psi though . . . Fortunately I rarely punctured and when I did I sent them off to England to a guy who would fix them for a reasonable fee. I figured that was way more efficient than me ruining a good tub. Nowadays, if I was still racing I'd be inclined to go with some top-notch clinchers and latex tubes.

    Cyclops. Yes the Sidi ads are crap.

  • I have been riding on tubulars for 30+ years, training and racing. Vittoria Pavè Evo CG tubs are my favorite, since I ride in wet conditions about once a week. I hate to even say it, but I have been on the ground less than a handful of times in all those years. I credit that to tubulars and proper inflation. I doubt that would be true, if I had been riding clinchers. My prostrate is smaller due to tubulars too. The only clinchers I have are on my 1984 Toyota Landcruiser.

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