Does any body know if the rolling resistance of 2.15 Balloon tyres is more than say Marathon Plus 1.5 tyres ?
I have an E-Bike with balloons (Big Bens) which does not have the same range as my wife's E-Bike with 1.5 Marathon Plus .
Same battery, same motor.
Yes - she does weigh less than me !
I find wider tyres run at lowish pressure have the lowest resistance.
Plus they absorb road shock better.
I am sure Andre will be along soon to give the low down on this…
Julian.
I'm afraid the low down on this one is GO ON A DIET! No, really, when you're putting out a fifth of a horsepower or, usually, much less, mass is the greatest determinant of everything to do with a bicycle. In the end, much as touring cyclists may struggle against the pernicious racing legacy infecting everything, we are perforce all weight weenies.
Besides the human factors that everyone has already referred to -- that your wife is lighter, that she may be pedalling more, that she may be using the gearbox more efficiently, or the modes of the motor ditto -- there are also also often said to be technical factors to do with the relative condition of the two batteries, though I must tell you that my experience is that modern electric bike batteries, if you pay for the best and take care of them (keeping them in the main fully charged after even the shortest ride), do not decline into old age either steeply or soon. Jan Heine has built a line of boutique tyres on another factor which aids comfort and secure roadholding on the bike, and may also contribute to low rolling resistance: compliance to the road, particularised by Heine as soft sidewalls. The Big Apples have some of the softest sidewalls I have ever felt on a bike tyre.
The difference in the power required if the tyres on your two bikes are inflated to the same pressure is likely to be at least 10W or around 7% of your nominal output --
in favour of the bike on balloons. You should, if we could isolate the other factors, be able to leave her behind. Here's a graph, courtesy of Schwalbe at
https://www.schwalbe.com/en/balloonbikes.html --
-- which shows what the tests the Deutschen Sporthochschule, Köln conducted on balloons and other tyres at their specially built multi-surface track discovered. In short, the 37mm tyre needs to be inflated to a jarring 4 bar to enjoy the same low rolling resistance as the rider of the 60mm tyre enjoys at a cushy 2 bar. As I'm sure you know, comfort over a day's ride translates into greater reserves at the end of the day.