Laurens ‘Tan’ Dam shows off his gums at La Vuelta.

If you’ve been paying attention, you may have noticed that ‘useful’ things like practicality and functionality can often take a back seat to more basic pursuit of aesthetics and taste. If you haven’t, then your name might just be Paul.

You may have also become aware that there is occasional flagrant flouting of certain guidelines by curators and purveyors alike. Long black socks, red bar tape and big bidons, facial and leg hair, some have even been known to experiment with the much-maligned and socially destructive drug EPMS. Some things shouldn’t be tampered with, while others are prone to some manipulation as seen fit by circumstance. And some things will always be ‘just the way it is’.

Take tyres for example. Rule #8 was one of the first decreed (it was the eighth, if memory serves) and is one of the more complex in its simplicity. To put it in layman’s terms, tyres are a simple thing to get right. Black. They match any bike regardless of colour and will always look good no matter how much abuse they receive. But look more closely and a myriad of options are offered; match this to that or that to the other bit, and the other bit back to that. Or just go black. See, told you it was simple.

So why should choosing a new set of rubber be a cause of consternation? I needed to replace my trusty Pavé CG’s as they’d seen better days, from the cobbles of Belgium and France in April through a winter of more off-road detours than any road bike should be subjected to. Punctures became a feature of almost every ride, two at a time on a couple of outings. The green tread was worn and cut up and my mates were getting sick of waiting and probably wanted to strangle me with a tube as I attempted to get aired up and mobile yet again. Hang on, green? Surely not compliant…

Well yeah, the hue that is ubiquitous with Pro bikes in the European spring is the one color of tread that gets an automatic pass due to that other great cornerstone of the dual pursuits of Cycling and Looking Fantastic: heritage. From Malteni orange to Lampre pink, green goes with anything and everything in Spring. Vittoria’s Pavés and FMB’s Paris Roubaixs have seen more action on more bikes on more cobbles than Mother Theresa has seen sick kids, and thus get almost as many blessings as she gives out on a mission to Africa. But go back further still, and the sidewall colour of choice to set off any steed is the gumwall. Or skinwall. Maybe tanwall, depending on your diocese.

It should’ve been easy to choose a new tyre due to my spate of flats. Thick, heavy rubber with all kinds of Kevlar reinforcement, varying TPI counts and tread patterns all were mulled over, for about five minutes. I wanted gumwalls. To hell with practicality and functionality, not to mention cost. I made the call to my rubber pusher Graeme  and he administered the goods stat. Thinner, lighter, faster, probably less durable; my new Corsa SC’s may not solve any puncture issues, but damned if they don’t look the business. Fantastic, even.

The gumwall is back, and there’s no going black.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/brettok@velominati.com/gummy/”/]

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • There's a notorious Wellington bike identity who would roll up to the start of races, press their tyres with his thumb to the rim and tell them their tyres were going flat - they'd scuttle off to try and find a pump before realizing they had 120 psi in there all along. He could do press ups on his thumbs and first finger till he broke one of his thumbs doing that. Mounting conti tyres to campy rims will get your thumbs into shape for most applications.

  • My carbon bicicletta showin' some Gums! Had been riding some Budgetatus Neuvation wheels for a few years, now upgraded to some nice Ksyrium SuperLights. A much, much nicer riding wheelset & they look proper on such a bike as well, I think. (I'd prefer some green tires but had the blue Veloflexs on hand. And a Deda pillar is high on the list, but so far the Ritchey has done just fine but always nice to match pillar, stem, bars.) And, most importantly, a new backdrop, as I've moved into an awesome new house! Sometime soon I'll build a bike shed in the backyard, can't wait for all that space to store, work, and maybe avoid some household chores...

  • @G'rilla

    @unversio

    I understand which word type design now! I do appreciate the suggestions. I wanted to be too careful in using the V typeset as it is great but I did not want to be seen as swiping some one else`s work. The type I displayed above is the same that I used on the "Richter" wheels. But yeah the V does look good. I am compelled to preview an idea that I have tried out on two sets of rims - one the climbing wheels for Frank's Mt Hawkalougie ride, and another CX 50mm. Behold...

  • I think that the results came out well. Of course, these went to paint before the decision to finally go with Café Roubaix on the rims.

    I am shipping the climbing wheels to Frank this week.

  • @Ron

    My carbon bicicletta showin' some Gums! Had been riding some Budgetatus Neuvation wheels for a few years, now upgraded to some nice Ksyrium SuperLights. A much, much nicer riding wheelset & they look proper on such a bike as well, I think. (I'd prefer some green tires but had the blue Veloflexs on hand. And a Deda pillar is high on the list, but so far the Ritchey has done just fine but always nice to match pillar, stem, bars.) And, most importantly, a new backdrop, as I've moved into an awesome new house! Sometime soon I'll build a bike shed in the backyard, can't wait for all that space to store, work, and maybe avoid some household chores...

    That will look sharp with the post. Ron, do you not have a thick layer of snow yet in Ontario? Or is this a pre-Xmas season photo?

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