Selecting the correct tire pressure; How airing down motorcycle tires affects contact patch

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • This is a deep dive into airing down tire pressures on large adventure bikes offroad and the effects it has on handling and tire footprint and contact area.
    www.BretTkacs.com
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Комментарии • 449

  • @wanderlpnw
    @wanderlpnw Год назад +155

    As an engineer, I love these experiment videos. A lot of common motorcycle beliefs aren't rooted in science, so it's great to see people like Bret get down and dirty with real data.

    • @nickthequick
      @nickthequick Год назад +15

      Beliefs aren't rooted in science. A basic definition of belief is the absence of knowledge; it is a worldview that is chosen due to the social environment a person happens to find himself in. A prime example is religion.

    • @PP-wz7mp
      @PP-wz7mp Год назад

      @@nickthequick utter bullshit

    • @MrDavidfuchser
      @MrDavidfuchser Год назад +2

      @@nickthequick Beliefs can be rooted in truth, lies, science, or ignorance. I believe in good science, but then by your definition science is the absence of knowledge from my perspective.

    • @Wintersdark
      @Wintersdark Год назад +6

      Not gonna get into the semantic argument, but for sure it's GREAT to see some science done because as you said, a LOT of common knowledge for motorcycles is not at all rooted in science, just random explanations that people guessed at then told other people until everyone is repeating the same "seems plausible" but totally unfounded stuff.
      This is the motorcycle content I want more than anything else.

    • @CarnevalOne
      @CarnevalOne Год назад +3

      @@nickthequick Most belief is absolutely based in science, or some kind of systematic observation, like belief in God is based in philosophical inquiry and observation of our universe. Whether that belief corresponds to truth, is another matter, which is why more scientific inquiry is employed to try to get closer to truth. Science should never really answer all of our questions absolutely, apart from the basic stuff, like how long an object is, thus ot can never really "be settled", a statement that is profoundly unscientific.
      So, more scientific experiments are needed to try to better answer the questions this man here thinks he did. For example, he observed what he deems to be a small change in contact patch area. Cool. How much does that actually affect traction or floatation over a given type of surface? There was no attempt to test this scientifically, yet I feel like an attempt to draw such conclusions was made, which IMO was pseudoscientific. A 10% contact patch change could have a 50% impact on traction, if that could be measured. Another factor that was never considered here was the type of tire casing, sidewall thickness, compound, tread. What other unbeknown to us factors could there be? The more we know, the more questions we have. That is true science IMO.

  • @BigRockMoto
    @BigRockMoto Год назад +49

    Thank you for doing this, this must have been a lot of work and we all appreciate it.

    • @adstryker5084
      @adstryker5084 Год назад

      Yep. The test tires were a roughly 70% pavement / 30% dirt design, with small grooves between large blocks, such that the surface of the tire is unlikely to shift around much when the internal pressure is reduced. I'd be interested in seeing a test with a more dirt-worthy tire, like a RallZ or Dual Venture. I've noticed that dropping the front tire pressure on a RallZ (from the KTM recommended solo 22 psi down to about 16-to-18 psi) made the front end of my 640 Adventure a lot less skittish on hard-pack single-track (hard-pack with a thin layer of dust on top). Given the marginal gains in footprint area, I wonder if the significant difference in "skittishness" (which is just the "feel" of losing traction) is primarily in the tire's ability to conform to small surface irregularities.

  • @abcusa123mich
    @abcusa123mich Год назад +19

    I struggle with this topic, for me there is a major difference in "feel" on sand when I air down about 50%. I can't say if its a larger foot print or what, but it makes the bike much easier for me to ride at low speeds on sand. R1200gs w/ 50/50 tires.

  • @RetiredAdventureRider
    @RetiredAdventureRider Год назад +39

    I think the small increased surface area of my tire when airing down pales in comparison to the massive increase in my skills that I get by some proper training. I always like to put my effort into where I get the best payback. Thanks for these videos.

    • @monunyabidness5949
      @monunyabidness5949 Год назад

      The way you started that statement, ... I was getting ready to post "YOU CAN"T ARGUE WITH FACTS"

  • @danmoore6195
    @danmoore6195 Год назад +34

    What I'm getting from your video and then the comments below is that the science is telling us that while the actual change in footprint and/or flex is small, most comments show that airing down gives the rider a better "feel", and more confidence. I think I have heard you and other top experts teach that confidence is one of the main things a rider needs to become competent on a motorcycle. So if that tiny growth footprint and miniscule amount of flex result in a huge boost in confidence and feel - then airing down a bit is probably well worth it for many. And for competitive riders, every tiny bit of advantage can make a difference. Thanks for clarifying the science behind this, but the placebo effect seems to be much stronger than the science in this case.

    • @BikerGirlTraveler
      @BikerGirlTraveler Год назад +7

      May be, but riders get a boost in confidence because they have been brained washed to believe that they have more traction. It’s all in their mind. I am one who when ai bought my Tenere 700 about a year and a half ago started airing down my tires when riding in the rain. Until a couple of months ago I realized that I’ve been riding for 34 years, rain or shine, and I never aired down my tires on any of my sport bikes and never had any problems at all with traction in the rain. So I started asking myself why I was doing that now. I realized that I developed that mentality from watching videos about ADV bikes. It’s amazing how much others can influence us when you when we are hungry for knowledge. Which is the problem with social media, any fool can make himself or herself sound like an expert when they are not. Sadly someone will always be willing to believe them, I did. What I like about Bret is that he practices what he teaches and his skills are far what I see from others.

    • @4LowRocks
      @4LowRocks Год назад +2

      Seems like a good case of confirmation bias is at work here and potentially being confused as better "feel" and confidence.

    • @monunyabidness5949
      @monunyabidness5949 Год назад +6

      As somebody who's sold tires for a long time, I can guarantee you, most people can't tell the difference in air pressure.
      The "confidence" comes from believing they have done something that aids them.

    • @monunyabidness5949
      @monunyabidness5949 Год назад +1

      @@4LowRocks YUP!

    • @edwindol3597
      @edwindol3597 Год назад +2

      i think we also need to factor in that the low tire pressure is making the tire work like a suspension system, suspension systems keep the tire in contact with whats ridden on, therefore contact surface does not matter so much?

  • @ReverendBill1
    @ReverendBill1 Год назад +22

    Although not measurable by any criteria discussed, my anecdotal experience is about FEEL. When I air down the bikes feel planted, stable, and confident in marginal off-road surfaces. The difference in sand is remarkable. Nice analysis, thanks Brett.

    • @rydedaworld
      @rydedaworld Год назад +11

      Agreed. Try both and draw your own conclusions. I'm not going to run 8psi dirt bike pressures on my 600 lb tubeless ADV, but I'm also not going to run the manufacturer suggested *STREET* 36/42 pressures in the gnarly stuff either. I like Brett's conclusion of no more than 20% lower. 28/33 sounds about right, though I have gone down to 25/32.

    • @JohnnyFuelMotorcycleAdventures
      @JohnnyFuelMotorcycleAdventures Год назад +3

      I can't say for sure if I"m truly feeling a difference or if it's the placebo effect. After watching this video, I have no doubt Bret is right about the contact patch changes being minimal (like 1-3 mm) but there are many times when a few millimeters here and there make a meaningful change. Examples include seat height, handlebar height, rake & trail, preload, etc. So maybe a tiny change in contact patch is still substantial?

    • @stevestowell-virtue3781
      @stevestowell-virtue3781 Год назад +8

      Sand, gravel, and mud are reasons to air down. You will have much better feel. These are 3 dimensional surfaces the tires sink into. The channel host's analysis was done on a hard 2 dimensional surface.

    • @JW-jh7zv
      @JW-jh7zv Год назад +2

      @@JohnnyFuelMotorcycleAdventures I don't think it's a placebo effect. When I had E10 front on my R1200 GSA it was better all the way around off road at 28psi than my road pressure. The front suspension wasn't as rough over obstacles, and the front was planted in corners.

    • @MKlukowski
      @MKlukowski Год назад

      ​@@stevestowell-virtue3781 Rob Pepper's analysis (on 4x4's) has similar conclusions as Bret's. Perhaps in terms of feel it *may* be different up to a certain pressure (as Bret noted) but the traction/surface area argument is near insignificant.

  • @igi20031
    @igi20031 Год назад +8

    Thanks! You creating extremely useful content. As your proud supporter on patreon, adding some here too.

    • @BretTkacs
      @BretTkacs  Год назад +3

      I am currently in CA lining up to shoot a trail braking video that is only possible because of Patreon funds... Thank you

  • @frank_jk
    @frank_jk Год назад +13

    Thanks Bret! Insightful as always. In my limited experience, I have found that whatever traction issues I encounter are most likely due to a lack of riding skills, and not due to tire pressure.

  • @ADHDiy_Guy
    @ADHDiy_Guy Год назад +10

    I really appreciate that you included how the tires form around obstacles in addition to surface area only. I would have thought it had a bigger difference, but this was great to see.

  • @ridingluna
    @ridingluna Год назад +4

    I guess it is VERY important, after reading many comments, to keep this in mind and read well the video title.
    This air down test its for ADV Bikes, and NOT for enduro, motocross or trial bikes.
    Great job as always Bret, thank you so much for your effort and time.

  • @Alaska_MD
    @Alaska_MD Год назад +8

    I'm an engineer [retired] and I've been saying this for years. The critical parameter in a tire is the sidewall. The engineers set the tire pressure recommendations to achieve a certain sidewall profile. When you mess with that, bad things happen [pinch flat]. But, Bret, the science won't matter... the engineering won't matter. They all watched Travis do it once.... once... and after that they won't listen to any calculations.

    • @rider65
      @rider65 4 месяца назад

      Absolutely. Suppleness. Compliance.

    • @Alaska_MD
      @Alaska_MD 4 месяца назад

      @@rider65 Yep, so is the bead where the rubber meets the frame. Instead of being ridid that slips now ... oh wait, let's invent rim locks for that. So smart.

  • @jrdepew
    @jrdepew Год назад +2

    And a pinch flat avoided is worth any real or imagined gain! Thanks for such in-depth analysis.

  • @thomassowinski6765
    @thomassowinski6765 Год назад +20

    Thanks for the years of great content Bret! I appreciate the effort you put into these videos, and I'm looking forward to taking one of your classes in person at some point in the future!

  • @scudrunneradv3269
    @scudrunneradv3269 Год назад +2

    Left my home in eastern nc on brand new Dunlop trailmax mission tires on my 2017 f 800 gs. Rode the entire Trans American trail coast to coast and back on the same tires. Kept them at the operators manual recommended TP the entire trip. Tires performed magnificently on and off road. Tires held up even on big rocks etc. No damage to my rims or tires. Was comfortable riding at the recommended pressure.

  • @ecalzo
    @ecalzo Год назад +6

    Wow... i've taken for granted that airing down my tires won't give me a lot of benefits based on your words.. And now you came out with this video supporting your words with experimental testing .. Well done .... you rock !! Hi from italy Bret..

  • @6226superhurricane
    @6226superhurricane Год назад +4

    a couple of things i feel the need to pull you up on being an experience trail bike rider and 4wdriver.
    airing down isn't about width of the tyre it's about length, it's about changing the tyre from more of a fixed round shape to turning the bottom section of the tyre into a tank track (figuratively) where the leading edge is placed on the ground stays in situ until it moves past the centreline of the rim and is lifted up. this does happen at road pressure too but your analysis of the increased length from airing down being basically insignificant is flawed. small changes can have big effects.
    tyre conformity increases both traction and puncture resistance, if a tyre can mould around a sharp object some of the pressure on the point is spread onto the sides of that object or onto the ground. you can visualize this by getting two party balloons and inflating one as much as you can and half inflating the other make a pyramid out of blue tack or something similar with a toothpick sticking out of the top and then push the balloons onto it. the hard one won't deflect and will pop the half inflated one will take much more force before popping if it does. so too much pressure = punctures, too little pressure = pinch flats.
    the right pressure ultimately comes down to weight, tyre stiffness, speed and terrain.
    more weight = more pressure
    stiffer sidewall = less pressure required to achieve sidewall flex
    high speed = high pressure or sidewall flex can overheat the tyre
    terrain is variable square edged rocks require pressures or speeds that prevent pinch flats
    sand requires low pressures for flotation (the figurative tank tread)
    tar roads have good traction and high speeds, high pressures allow maximum handling and braking.
    there's no set answer for tyre pressure, but there is benefits to airing down and times where it is necessary.

  • @gmrecneps
    @gmrecneps Год назад +4

    Folks. Find a bit of technical (hill, rocky, or deep sand/gravel) terrain that you can barely ride without crashing at street tire pressures. Then lower your pressure to 17-20 psi and ride it again. You won't need to do anything else. The difference will be unbelievable. The reason Brett isn't seeing much difference in the length and width of the contact patch is that he is not airing down by a lot, and contact patch (surface area) is a function of length TIMES width. If you air down by 10% your contact patch will only be 11% bigger. And the length and width of it will only each only be about 5.4% bigger. That won't seem like a lot. I run about 45 on the street and air down to about 18 off road. That gives me a contact patch that is 2.5 times bigger, but still is only 1.6 times longer and wider. It won't look like that much if you look at a footprint. Now imagine going to the beach and having a 2 by 4 piece of lumber. Press it end wise into the sand and it will have an 8 inch contact patch (2 x 4 = 8). If you press down on it with 144 lbs that will be 18 pounds per square inch. Imagine how deep into the sand it would go. That's how deep my GS will dig with tires at 18 psi. Now press down on that two by four with 360 pounds. That's how deep my GS (and yours) will go with tires inflated to 45 psi. All you have to do to decide which pressure is best for you is ask yourself how deep you would like your tires to dig. It's huge pain in the ass to air back up, and Brett is an incredible rider, so he doesn't need the help and hence doesn't bother. If he rode right at the edge of his ability and frequently ran into terrain he couldn't handle I bet he would be airing down too.

  • @dave-d
    @dave-d Год назад +2

    Damn dude - there you have it. Excellent work Bret. I always thought the air down was for greater tread flexion to increase grip off road - not increased contact patch but I may be wrong. A deep subject indeed. Thank you.

  • @progammler
    @progammler Год назад +9

    very interesting! On our 300cc dirt bikes we go from ~14psi on dry rocks down to ~9psi in wet/muddy terrain (on mousse) and it makes a huge difference because the carcasse is so soft that it basically wraps around rocks. In comparison on my 790 the carcasse is much more rigid, the compound is harder and the knobs larger and shallower. That's why airing down doesn't have that much of an effect. And indeed: in mudddy terrain no matter the pressure the grip is always terrible :D

    • @danmiezejeski7735
      @danmiezejeski7735 Год назад +1

      This lines up with my experiences too. I have a KTM 500 Dual sport and decided to try to ride my local trails at street pressures. It was mostly OK but the steep loose climbs were much more difficult to keep the rear from spinning up, and the front was much less stable.

    • @philipraposo8324
      @philipraposo8324 Год назад +3

      On a 300lbs or less bike even 10psi is a huge difference. Not only in feel but performance. This video doesn't apply to actual off-road bikes and only for large adv bikes with road focused tires.

    • @ExpatonTwoWheels
      @ExpatonTwoWheels Год назад +3

      Same here. I run Tubliss on my WR450F and it's amazing the increase in traction from dropping from 15 psi normal trail pressures to 8-10 psi. I only do that in the rear. Found low pressures in the front just kill my steering feel with no gain. I can't place the bike precisely with low pressure in the front.

    • @philipraposo8324
      @philipraposo8324 Год назад

      @@ExpatonTwoWheels yeah front tire I run it a little higher forsure.

    • @edwindol3597
      @edwindol3597 Год назад +1

      i think we also need to factor in that the low tire pressure is making the tire work like a suspension system, suspension systems keep the tire in contact with whats ridden on, therefore contact surface does not matter so much?

  • @gaucho1937
    @gaucho1937 Год назад +2

    Thanks Bret for all the hard work and reasonsble explanations. It is no surprise that the Contact patch variation in size is neglectible when airing down about 10 to 20 %. The tire manufacturer of a 50/50 street legal tire must comply with a series of safety requs and warrant road performance even for fools like me forgetting to check the tire pressure regularly. Off road lower pressure reduces vibrations caused by rough surface better than the suspension is able to do in the first 3 mil of travel. Thats why it feels better. 20 % down is a good starting point for self testing.
    Contact patch shape is an underrated topic. The longe the patch the more straight you go. A shorter patch shape will steer more sensitive resp. deflect much easier on rough terrain. The size of the patch

  • @IRLtrolls
    @IRLtrolls Год назад +3

    Years back after watching one of your tire videos I went from a 130 rear on my Dualsports to a 120 rear (Dunlop D606 always) and the 120 is so so much better off-road. The thinner tire is lighter and spins up faster and it seems to dig into the mud and bite better instead of floating on top. Proper pressure and a thinner tire help me a lot

  • @monunyabidness5949
    @monunyabidness5949 Год назад +1

    Great job Bret. People can't argue against the facts. Everybody thinks they are an expert and will come up with their own convoluted reason to continue doing what they're doing, when the facts, so clearly presented, overwhelmingly demonstrate that their reasoning is illogical and inaccurate.
    Bravo mate.

  • @henrygerwien186
    @henrygerwien186 Год назад

    Compared to the myriad of motorbike videos flooding the world, I am very grateful for such factual posts with sensible content. The comparison of the different surfaces between 90/90 and 120/80 (as an example) was very amazing, how little difference it makes. But I am even more thrilled to learn that more than 20% less air actually makes all driving characteristics worse.
    Thanks, Bret, for this valuable work. Regards, Henry

  • @matt_kelly
    @matt_kelly Год назад +3

    Thanks for all the research on this! I still rarely air down, especially since the time I hit a pothole and blew the bead on my cast rim, necessitating a tube to keep going. Lesson learned.

  • @tshansen
    @tshansen Год назад +1

    Ooohhh the cruelty in destroying good myths and discussions with facts. This will video will shake the foundations in some communities 😆 Great work Bret, once again you deliver high quality content. Cheers ☕🇳🇴

  • @morganmullins7559
    @morganmullins7559 Год назад +2

    I’m always afraid of pinch flats that my biggest reason for not airing down. Great video!!

  • @MotoAdventurer
    @MotoAdventurer Год назад +1

    Solid work Bret. I was pretty convinced you were going to completely stone wall airing down. I was pleasantly surprised. We’re racing adventure bikes in Kentucky and have been doing “research” in this area with low
    Pressures, rim locks, and even mousses. It’s interesting to compare our notes to yours. Thanks again!

  • @PetrolJunkie
    @PetrolJunkie Год назад +1

    As always I love the way Bret breaks down everything in his videos and shows his work. That's how you make an argument that should convince all but the stubborn idiots in a room.
    This issue is about scale. The reason it works on a 4x4 is weight and size which is substantially more than a motorcycle. (I've built and tuned professional-level competition machines.) That is really important.
    Motorcyclists are trying to apply that effect to their motorcycles and it just doesn't scale the way they imagine. I don't air down at all unless I'm on really rough ground and that is specifically to reduce deflection. A rock garden can bounce a fully aired-up tire all over the place, but at 20% less air the bike is much more controllable. It's not a lot but sometimes not a lot is what you want. The suspension setup is more critical to bike performance than air pressure, air pressure is more like the fine-tuning knob after you get the suspension right. Suspension is more like a course adjustment. Anyone that tunes anything with an engine can tell you that is dead true at any scale.
    Sidewall and tread section construction matter more when it comes to tire flex and contact patch than air pressure even on a monster truck, air pressure is still a fine adjustment.
    There is little surprise that all the tires have similar contact patch sizes. That's a matter of physics. They are balancing rolling resistance and grip and that formula only has so much give. If you have a narrower tire you need a longer contact patch to get the same surface area. What matters more when you are talking about contact patch size is surface area, not so much the shape. The shape is more about rolling resistance as a wider tire has more resistance than a narrow tire with the exact same surface area. Softer tires have more rolling resistance than harder tires, but the softer tire has more traction given the same surface area. If you want more grip you actually want a softer tire with a more appropriate tread pattern. I run 70/30s on everything but soft and loose soil, when I know there is going to be sandy river bottom soil I switch to knobbies with large and deep voids. The 70/30s work well on compacted soil, river rock, and whatnot.
    But, there is something else to this discussion.
    The size of the tire matters. Taller tires climb more easily. Narrow tires dig more, and wide tires float more. Ask anyone how a 300 or 350 tire feels on a wet road versus a standard-size tire. It's why they make giant agricultural tires and very narrow tires, each has its purpose. But in the motorcycle world there is more to it than just float vs dig. Width also affects turn-in rate a long with some other geometry of the forks and wheelbase, and weight, it's complicated, but just know that tire width affects how the bike turns into a corner. That doesn't seem as obvious as to why off-road people should care, it matters when you put that same bike on pavement. That tire has to keep you on the road at 70 MPH and keep you from eating dirt on a trail. Believe it or not, there is a magic formula most tire companies use to arrive at that point. That is the real reason why the tires are so closely matched in performance, they don't have a lot of room to work with while designing a tire that can do both as well as they can.

  • @luismokdeci
    @luismokdeci Год назад +1

    Valeu! thanks so much for the hard work all those years you have been putting content on your channel!

  • @stitch3163
    @stitch3163 Год назад +2

    Thanks, Brett. A lot of work and analysis went into this, which is greatly appreciated. Looking forward to comments from the tire and bike manufacturers.

    • @coq7716
      @coq7716 Год назад

      Thank you for your great work and reporting. Awesome knowledge 💪

  • @danmanthe9335
    @danmanthe9335 Год назад +1

    Wow. Thanks Bret! As if I needed another reason to listen to his knowledge

  • @sanjosejeff
    @sanjosejeff Год назад +1

    All I know are dirt bikes. I have the “tubliss” system in the front and rear allowing me to run 4psi in the rear and 6-8 in the front. The most noticeable upgrade I’ve done on the bike. We call it cheating. Traction and control over wet, angled roots in the trail is amazing. Plus, the 110 psi core keeps the rim protected while hitting obstacles like in this video. It’s not a myth. On this, I absolutely know of what I speak.
    I ordered a 23 890 r that’s not here yet. I know nothing about adventure bikes. Thx for the info although if “tubliss” ever makes a system for bigger bikes, I’m all in

  • @davidwood974
    @davidwood974 Год назад +1

    This is a great format for discussion, thank you Bret!

  • @Ironhawx
    @Ironhawx Год назад +1

    Thanks Bret! This video is a must for new riders.

  • @Garzatron-ue3cp
    @Garzatron-ue3cp Месяц назад

    Great video. Coming from mountain biking I’ve realized moto tires are a different beast. In mtb there’s a fine line between traction and compliance vs pinch flats. Dual sport/adv tires are much much stiffer and I don’t think you’ll ever get the compliance without walking the line of pinch flatting. I’ve ridden some rocky trails at recommended single rider psi recently and it felt totally fine for traction….id rather lose a wee bit of traction than deal with a flat.
    You have a great channel. I watched it before I swapped out my new DOT tires and it went pretty well. Thanks for the content.

  • @rivernet62
    @rivernet62 Год назад +1

    Thanks for fixing the title. My OCD was triggered.

  • @docimastic
    @docimastic Год назад +1

    Love it! Thanks for a great, informative, and well done video. I know every motorcyclist has wondered about contact patch variations, both with regard tire cross-section/width and also with regard air pressure and you covered them both. Thanks again, David

  • @OnTheHonda
    @OnTheHonda Год назад +1

    Outstanding data! Quite comprehensive study.

  • @abubakarhussein5197
    @abubakarhussein5197 Год назад +2

    I love your approach Bret and look forward to meeting you. Your effort, and straight forward explanation even in tutorial videos is another level. Much appreciated

  • @mosa4688
    @mosa4688 Год назад +1

    Good to see the firmly held age old "truths" being looked at rationally rather than hearsay.

  • @RogierYou
    @RogierYou Год назад +1

    Wow you put a substantial amount of work into this one!

    • @BretTkacs
      @BretTkacs  Год назад +1

      A stupid amount, I could have made a 2 hr documentary on the process and controls to isolate accurate results.

  • @royandtracyboling5969
    @royandtracyboling5969 Год назад

    I am appreciating the concept of "ride your ride" more as I watch different instructors. We ride based on experience, bike type, bike setup, and terrain.

  • @onerider808
    @onerider808 Год назад +1

    Interesting video, and spot on, IMO. I’ve always stuck with recommended pressure, and got where I was going just fine, on or off road. Tire type and rider skill trump pressure tweaks every time.

  • @enduromotorradtouren
    @enduromotorradtouren Год назад +1

    I love your myth busting, Bret, done with data. Your episode also confirms that "feeling" is important, that a combined team of rider-bike has a certain "window" a feeling well. A bit like cooks - they don't weigh their spices exactly to the milligram ;-) Thanks a lot, much appreciated, Günter/Nürnberg, Germany

  • @cameronbrown8757
    @cameronbrown8757 Год назад +11

    Great content. Coming from a mountain bike background, we air down primarily for increased traction in cornering off-road. I know from experience that the amount of "G"s you can pull on a corner goes up significantly at lower pressures. We basically air down until you risk a pinch flat, or until it feels too squirrelly.
    I would like to suggest a follow-on video, again, data-driven: perhaps record max speed on a fixed turn radius before slipping vs. air pressure.

    • @jessicafryer4258
      @jessicafryer4258 8 месяцев назад

      I too am curious about the contact patch footprint and cornering; more challenging to collect the data. Thank you for this data-driven study.

  • @BTimmer
    @BTimmer Год назад +1

    Well done Brett.

  • @mattdelcomyn8012
    @mattdelcomyn8012 Год назад +1

    Nice job Bret! Very scientific.

  • @TexasTacoKiller
    @TexasTacoKiller Год назад +1

    Excellent information Professor, as a beginner on the off road, glad I’m getting good info as I def would prefer a possible fall as to a bent rim

  • @treybenavides9138
    @treybenavides9138 Год назад +1

    And the science is correct. Absolutely proper observations.

  • @rodrigofabregas7756
    @rodrigofabregas7756 Год назад +1

    Thank you Bret....nice and serious analysis!

  • @mauricioescobaradnueve5281
    @mauricioescobaradnueve5281 Год назад +1

    Great information!
    I really appreciate all the hard work you put into giving us objective advice.

  • @themightylui9632
    @themightylui9632 Год назад +1

    Great video - looking forward to the follow up video(s)

  • @haroldshull6848
    @haroldshull6848 4 месяца назад

    As a retired mechanic, I didn't have all the materials of measurement listed here, but I'd bought a 2020 Ducati Desert Sled, changed the front rim to 21" with an appropriate tire and slid the fork tubes up the triple clamps (head and crown if you will) and needed a system for initial setup. Having a 10 acre back yard of sand and mesquite and a (usually) dry creek bed with motorcycle trails well beat in through all of it I proceeded to testing. With front and rear at max suggested pressure it didn't take long to decide it was rolling like a rock. Those tire pressures were within 2 psi of each other and stayed at that difference for the whole test. Starting at suggested mfg. pressures I rode the track at an increasing pace until things were sliding around and the suspension was working vigorously. Back to the garage, let out 2psi, and ride to test parameters. 2 psi lower and test. Repeat. Eventually it was just wallowing around with little response to steering input. At that point I started adding pressure at the 2psi rate unti all responses were midrange acceptable. It was a well spent afternoon and I learned a lot. The Duc is running at expectations.

  • @rodintoulouse3054
    @rodintoulouse3054 Год назад +2

    very impressive research and effort. Thank you for sharing👍👍

  • @ride4adventure
    @ride4adventure Год назад +1

    Great investigation Brett.

  • @brantfurr986
    @brantfurr986 Год назад +3

    Great insight. I appreciate the scientific presentation... It does have me wondering about my Dual Sport motorcycle, with tubes and rimlocks, where I sometimes run as low as 8 PSI, where we are seeing a 70% decrease in tire pressure... Because as you demonstrated, tire response to deflation isn't linear... I know that your channel is largely focused on the adventure rider, on an adventure bike, but I thought it was worth sharing that you have sparked curiosity.

    • @philipraposo8324
      @philipraposo8324 Год назад

      This doesn't apply to smaller dual sports with actual off-road tires

    • @brantfurr986
      @brantfurr986 Год назад

      @@philipraposo8324 Yes, I know this was a video about bigger adventure bikes, however, I was stating that I was curious what the results for smaller dual sports would be.

    • @philipraposo8324
      @philipraposo8324 Год назад

      @@brantfurr986 i ride a klx300 and its a huge difference with tire pressures. we run dot knobbies that have soft sidewalls the tires flex far more and have lugs. its not comparable and his tests are extremely flawed and misleading.

    • @brantfurr986
      @brantfurr986 Год назад

      @@philipraposo8324 How are they flawed and misleading?

    • @philipraposo8324
      @philipraposo8324 Год назад

      @@brantfurr986 because dirt riding is not done on flat yard ground. Contact patch is completely different when considering a small rock on a hard tire vs same rock on a soft tire. A half inch stone will literally take the tire off the ground if it's pumped to street psi. If your running 8-10psi which I do all the time on my dual sport the rock does nothing because the tire conforms around it and doesn't leave the ground.the difference in area is huge.
      He is testing a street tire when most people who actually ride off-road ride some kind of knobby tire.
      Trying to validate his beliefs but it's only applies to a tiny portion of the off-road motorcycles. Yet he doesn't mention any of this in the video. Hard Enduro guys don't even run any air. Many keep 0 psi. Small dual sports run sub 14 psi all the time. Only large adv bikes run stupid high pressures because of the weight of the rider and bike plus gear. They are not designed to conform to terrain in the same way that off-road focused tires will.

  • @Outbackmotortek
    @Outbackmotortek Год назад

    Thank you for the thorough explanation. Very impressive

  • @backcountry4life
    @backcountry4life Год назад +1

    I’m a believer in 15% air down for off-road riding then back up to normal when on street. It’s about feel, control and confidence. Also, anymore than that I see riders getting pinch flats on their ADVs (500+ lbs).
    Thanks for the detailed analysis.

  • @rc51bigdaddy
    @rc51bigdaddy Год назад +1

    Great informative video. Thank you! I am pretty lazy so run my 890r at around 30 psi. On road is 35. Off road is 26. So kind of splitting the difference. Sounds OK after watching your video.

  • @moonshadowdrifting
    @moonshadowdrifting Год назад +1

    Very solid and important exercise. Thanks for doing it.

  • @mikemills5144
    @mikemills5144 Год назад +1

    Very detailed info, that must have taken a long time to put all of that together.

  • @williambanzhof9739
    @williambanzhof9739 Год назад +1

    EXCELLENT! Thanks for presenting!

  • @Trialgubben
    @Trialgubben Год назад +8

    Comin from trials riding where we are running with almost no air in the tires, going to a 2005 model 1200GS with TKC-80`s going a lot gravel and also real offroad, i think I have some experience to share. For "normal" gravel riding reducing slightly from road pressure - lets say from 32PSI to 25PSI - makes the ride noticeable more smooth and noticeable more grip on loose surface. Its not only the tires that works better, but it also takes some of the load off the suspension. For "real off road" riding in slow speed (im a trials rider. Trials riders dont need speed to have fun ;) ) i go even lower to around 20PSI and this really makes a difference in grip over rocks, diagonal roots and so on.

    • @BretTkacs
      @BretTkacs  Год назад

      20 PSI is around 45% below the pressure for the OEM tires. Of course if you are running an ADV knobbie then rise often have lower pressures by design including the pressure for max load

  • @joancarles6740
    @joancarles6740 Год назад +1

    Good job Bret.

  • @AT2021Rocker
    @AT2021Rocker Год назад

    You are the best motorcycling video instructor/informational teacher out there! I have learned so much from your videos!

  • @__Yannick__
    @__Yannick__ Год назад +1

    Thank you for doing all this research. It's really appreciated!

  • @ParklandTKD
    @ParklandTKD Год назад

    Thanks so much Bret. we had a chance to spent some time talking about this topic before and I firmly believe airing down the tires change the BIKE HANDLING... but , nothing is absolute and the surface changes very dramatically often... finding the right air pressure is the key ... relying in airing down to increase BIKE HANDLING is not the "one size fits all" solution.

  • @Getting-On
    @Getting-On Год назад +1

    Another great video, professionally produced with great scientific data to back it up.

  • @AdventureTravelandScuba
    @AdventureTravelandScuba Год назад

    Nothing better than knowledge from adventure riding guru, always learning something new.

  • @Petesmotoadventure
    @Petesmotoadventure Год назад +1

    As always excellent content and research. As a newer ADV rider the information you can get is mostly “this is how I do it”. My big Pan America in sand is difficult aired up or down. Biggest difference was when I went from the stock tires to the Anakee Wilds. HD wants those run at 36PSI and have found it to work well.

  • @Wintersdark
    @Wintersdark Год назад +1

    Fascinating! It's good to see some explanation to things I've experienced, but lacked the knowledge to really understand. I found dropping 3-6 psi (Tenere 700, 300lb rider) maybe helped a little, but going beyond that (despite people telling me it should help) made the bike wallow and felt *bad* at high speed on dirt and gravel. Maybe that matters less when bike+rider isn't 750lbs, but it certainly mattered for me.
    Not gonna lie. I REALLY thought there'd be a bigger contact patch size delta. While I already understood bigger contact patch doesn't inherently mean more traction (see fingertip vs whole hand on table traction experiment) I thought the conformance/give would do more... But it clearly doesn't until pressures are so low as to cause other problems.
    Yeah. Fascinating. Thank you for this incredibly informative video!

  • @yukonpeter
    @yukonpeter Год назад +1

    Super interesting. As a very average adv rider on a T7 what I am most interested in is how I smooth out my ride on dirt roads, when riding over wash-board and potholes (I hate standing up!), when going between 30-50 kmh. I've sometimes convinced myself that by airing down 10-15 percent that my ride is a little smoother, that the lower pressure is magically eating some of those little bumps. But it -- the smoother ride -- could very well be in my imagination! Adjusting preload, rebound and air pressure seems like a voodoo art to me!

  • @GCTO239
    @GCTO239 Год назад +7

    Great video that also underlines the huge differences between tires for bikes and tires for cars. If you have a car with dedicated offroad tires and small rims, airing down makes all the difference. It is not even a discussion. You have a massive gain in length of traction surface and you directly feel it. My Land Cruiser 78 series with 16 inch rims becomes a monster offroad only after airing down significantly. The tires on my 1100 Africa Twin only need a tiny bit of airing down in comparison.

  • @LostInADV
    @LostInADV Год назад +2

    Please, someone correct me because I’m not a math dude, I’m just trying to make sense for myself and what I feel when on the bike, because there is certainly a difference. Anyway, looking at the quarter and dime representation with the tire and pressures he used, I’m showing about a 13% increase in surface area when dropping 10%psi and 20% increase in surface area when dropping 20% psi on his front tire. Of course this isn’t exact. To me a 13-20% increase in surface area seems rather large. Again, please fix my numbers.
    I agree with others saying the feel is better. Grip and control is truly noticeable. Also want to mention that a massive obstacle for new riders on dirt is the mental barrier of feeling like their tires will slide out and not hold. They have a hard time focusing on training because “I felt my tire start to slip”. Airing down tends to fix that real quick. Let them ride stock psi for some time, then, when they go use the restroom you air their tires down a bit and watch them ride with more confidence and not no why. However, I can’t prove this to be caused by airing down, it could be because they left the restroom much lighter than before.

  • @discoveror9576
    @discoveror9576 9 месяцев назад +1

    Based on the 'riding on air', rather than 'riding on the tire', principle, I calculated the ratio of running load (i.e. wet bike + me + space suite + luggage) TO maximum tire load. I multiplied that ratio times the oem (for KTM 390 Adventure) recommended psi. The result (22 psi front & 18 psi rear) was a more comfortable, less 'squirrely' ride - both on and off pavement. For challenging off-pavement riding, I found that BELOW 15 psi the bike got 'squirrely', again; BUT, 17 psi front and 15 psi rear felt very nice i.e. confidence inspiring.
    Also, I noticed that KTM recommends 15 psi for MOST of their off-road bikes! All this was predicated on the assumption that tire manufacturer 'maximum load psi' is carefully (and conservatively?) calculated tor each specific tire model and size.

  • @TheUnsungVil
    @TheUnsungVil Год назад

    I feel reminded of a simplified math assignment in high school: From a predefined diameter -> Calculating the pressure inside a rubber tube with given outside pressure and contact patch surface - or calculating the contact patch surface from the difference between inner and outer pressure - or calculating the outer pressure from contact patch surface and inner pressure.
    In essence: Apart from the diameter (basically flattening/prolonguing the curvature segment touching the ground, and therefore the length) the tube width and height had only neglectable impact (at least in that simplified assignment scope)

  • @hibob841
    @hibob841 11 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting! I'm learning to ride off-road, recently got a light dual-sport, and the whole concept of airing-down (along with much else) is new to me. My recommended highway pressures are 22/22, but I've been dropping to 10-12 off-road at an instructor's recommendation. At my level, I'm sure I can't perceive any difference, but I thought I was giving myself a little help-and I need all of that I can get. In fact I just got Tubliss installed, in part, so that I could experiment with _really_ low pressures in relative safety. Now I'm wondering if it's worth the bother, haha...maybe I should just leave them at 22.

  • @exparrot9074
    @exparrot9074 Год назад +5

    Great video Brett, the minimal change in surface areas was pretty surprising to me. I would be curious to see if you could measure the changes in static friction between different pressures on various surfaces such as mud, sand, and hard pack dirt, by putting a rider on the bike and then side loading the front and rear wheel with a scale and seeing when deflection happens.
    Anecdotally, I started out riding the NEBDR with my pressures at 32/35 with Bridgestone AX41s on my 1290 Super Adventure R (max pressure for the tires was 35, tried to keep the same ratio F/R that KTM recommended (38/42). The front end grip was like a light switch at these pressures, the front end would slide and wash out in any type of soft mud or clay. When I backed pressures off further to 25/27 the motorcycle was far more controllable in soft terrain.

    • @danmiezejeski7735
      @danmiezejeski7735 Год назад

      I have similar anecdotal evidence as you. I have a 790 ADV and the factory tires weren't great. I dropped the pressures from 35/35 to 28/30 and felt much better. At the time I was living close to a offroad riding area, so I was riding about 70/30 offroad vs on. I took the bike in for service, and the next time I rode in the dirt I washed the front end and dropped the bike 3 times. The dealer had reset the pressures to 35/35. I was riding the same trails and the same conditions as before, and I had never dropped the bike until that day. The difference was the tire pressures.
      I think that a healthy part of that problem was the Karoo's that came on that bike, I switched to Dunlop TrailMax Missions and don't have issues with front end grip, even when I don't air down.

    • @exparrot9074
      @exparrot9074 Год назад

      @@danmiezejeski7735 I ran the Trailmax Missions for a season and a half, loved them in firm conditions, but they were awful in mud and clay. Granted, I did not play around with airing down at all. I hope Dunlop brings the Trailmax Raid over this season.

  • @bytesandbikes
    @bytesandbikes Год назад

    That is a super interesting video. I'm not experienced with off road bikes, but I've done a fair bit of 4×4 offroading. There's two big effects there with air down, and I'd like to know how much they apply to bikes:
    1. paddling- the tyre distortion gives you large scale dishing of the contact patch, which helps in sand and mud.
    2. lug flex- the gap between the lugs opens at the edge and closes in the middle, giving grip edges, and clearing out some mud.

    • @BretTkacs
      @BretTkacs  Год назад +1

      Lugs are shorter and tightly gapped, there is less area to allow distortion and bikes travel at higher speeds than those of 4x4's when they are aired down

  • @RamblingRuters
    @RamblingRuters Год назад

    Great information Bret! Appreciate your time & knowledge you put into your content and no ads or sponsorships, doing it yourself and that says alot.

  • @dandersonjr
    @dandersonjr Год назад

    I've never aired down but not because of scientific reason it has more to do with laziness but now I'm glad to know my laziness has scientific backing. Thanks. This video was worth the wait.

  • @rickwheeler6811
    @rickwheeler6811 Год назад +1

    Great information... I have personally never aired down

  • @johnmartin7144
    @johnmartin7144 Год назад

    Brett, Thanks! Fortnine reinvented! ❤

  • @stevewiley3539
    @stevewiley3539 Год назад +4

    I agree completely on everything thing that you stated. I consistently run 25 psi on my Africa Twin in our SoCal desert and mountains specifically for puncture resistance over severe rocky terrain. In my experience airing down in the rocks, gives the tires just enough give to resist punctures versus 33 - 38 psi. If you have a chance, test for puncture resistance at different tire pressures.

  • @matthewtomaszewski3269
    @matthewtomaszewski3269 Год назад +1

    Great lecture. I learned a lot, but I hope the midterm will be multiple choice.

  • @ChooseBrian
    @ChooseBrian Год назад

    I just run 30-33 all the time. Never an issue on or off road (with knobby Motoz Rallz). This video is fantastic.

  • @pieroo900ng
    @pieroo900ng Год назад +1

    thanks Bret

  • @zahirjlg
    @zahirjlg Год назад +1

    You have given us valuable information! Thank you so much! Keep up with this type of content!

  • @DanieleFarenga
    @DanieleFarenga Год назад

    just for this video you deserve 10 times your actual subscribers! always great!

  • @pinnacleroofing9841
    @pinnacleroofing9841 Год назад +5

    I'm torn. Data is good and generally king. The problem is what do I do with the actual experience of fighting to get up a gravel hill for 3 hours. The bike falls over, I try and pick it up and we both slide 30 ft back down the hill, only after airing down was I able to get up, and fairly easily

  • @Crazy-Chicken-Media
    @Crazy-Chicken-Media Год назад

    Fantastic work putting this all together.

  • @CasalGSA
    @CasalGSA Год назад +1

    Another absolutely fabulous work! 👏🏻

  • @gilvietor1918
    @gilvietor1918 Год назад

    This is wildly interesting. In offroading in my trucks/suv's I air down (have onboard air) and that is purely for a better ride. I never aired down on motorbikes for the ride, it was grip and I think I was wrong. When I road offroad and motocross, I'd hit the dunes and for ages I would lower my tire pressure, then I'd get a pinch flat going hard on the whoops. After a bit I just said, you know I am done changing tubes I am going to run my track pressure everywhere. No more flats and I have no idea if the frequency of washouts or crashes was up/down. I just said, I don't care I am sick of bending rims and pinch flats.
    Another killer video.

  • @tHaH4x0r
    @tHaH4x0r Год назад

    I love your videos, and I understand this is a lot of data to plow through, but honestly this video feels a bit chaotic and confusing.
    Still I appreciate all the work you put into these experiments, as the data itself is genuinely insightful and useful.

  • @moraesbl
    @moraesbl Год назад

    Thanks for one more great video based on experimentation and experience. You help a lot we riders with those informations. Good video Bret!

  • @RedRupert64
    @RedRupert64 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks very much. Very interesting. I know from experience that the 90/90 21" front wheel on my KTM 950 offers plenty of grip on-road, even compared with bikes that have traditionally sized road or track tyres. Normally 17".
    I never air down when riding off-road; I dont think it's worth the faff. The biggest advantage is to learn to ride better.

  • @firekite
    @firekite Год назад +7

    “Common knowledge” around the campfire is often rooted more in bombast and a tenuous grasp of folklore than genuine understanding and wisdom.

  • @AboutaMileAdventures
    @AboutaMileAdventures Год назад +1

    One thing I might have missed and i apologize if it was mentioned, but your tire is the first part of your suspension, and a tire with lower tire pressure will be on the ground longer and more often than one with higher pressure, so that marginal footprint really adds up over the course of a tough section of trail. On adv bikes, I agree with bret, a lot of effort for little to no reward, on dirtbikes it makes a HUGE difference.

    • @demezon6572
      @demezon6572 Год назад

      Longer and more often on the ground? - Use good suspension and adjust its good damping characteristics properly. Then you'll have it.
      Tire pressure won't change what you are postulating much. A lil' bit yes, but not at all much.
      BTW. Dirt bikes are all sus, with just a bare minimum of other parts.
      I am an engineer.

    • @AboutaMileAdventures
      @AboutaMileAdventures Год назад

      @@demezon6572 Everyone on youtube is an engineer, Then you should know that tires and tire pressure are also part of your suspension, and adjusting the tire pressure is also adjusting your suspension.

  • @musicwithmr.yvellez3583
    @musicwithmr.yvellez3583 Год назад +1

    I don’t ride the big heavy bikes. I reserve judgment on the “science” of this experiment. One problem I see, however, is that the video does not discuss methodology. It does not state under what conditions the footprint was measured. But I get the feeling it was measured under static (stand still) conditions rather than specific dynamic conditions. For example, I sometimes ride up or down a steep rock surface. When going down, I believe there is considerable advantage to having low pressure and weighting the front end by moving all the way forward. As the brake is applied, the suspension compresses and I believe the tire flattens giving me a substantially bigger patch to slow the bike and prevent skid. Similarly, when riding up the face, the weight is shifted to the rear. The lower pressure allows the tire to flatten more and provide the greater contact, giving one more traction.
    The video shows the tire will flatten more easily with lower pressure in a dynamic situation (going over obstacle), but only discusses this as a disadvantage (hitting the obstacle harder with the rim because the tire folded more). This is true in that situation, but this is why you would deweight the front of the bike going over such an obstacle. But he states they just ran over it. So I suggest this may be a case where the author just does not recognize the weakness of his testing methodology. 17:33

  • @Bbanker1974
    @Bbanker1974 Год назад

    Thanks Bret, been looking forward to this one.