Hi Ewan!
To echo Andre's comments (and he has the most experience of any of us wrt balloonbike tires), Schwalbe say the following...
What is the difference between Balloonbikes with 50 and 60 mm wide tires?
60 mm wide tires provide maximum Balloonbike comfort. But also the lighter weight 50 mm wide tires had double the air volume of a standard 37 mm tire. The 50 mm wide tyre is a good choice for anyone who wants a sporty yet comfortable ride. Between these two sizes there is also a popular 55 mm width.
This comes from Schwalbe's Balloonbikes™ FAQ:
http://www.balloonbikes.com/en/faqen.htmlThey have an entire (and newly updated) site on the topic here:
http://www.balloonbikes.com/en/It is a bit hard to dig out, but they consider their 50mm/2.0 Dureme to also be a balloonbike tire, albeit on the "sporty" side. I'm having success running mine between 2.0 and 2.5 bar (~29-36psi) and seem to have settled on F/R pressures of 29/32psi recently when riding my Nomad with a lightish day load. For reference, I weigh 172lb/78kg. The unladen bike weighs 45lb/20kg. With water, a HB bag, and the usual amount of "stuff" along -- and water -- the bike weighs about 65lb/29kg. Add these figures together to get the total bike weight, then halve it for average static load per tire (weight
distribution aside). Of course, with a heavier touring load, I'd run the tires at higher pressure.
Running the tires -- particularly the front one -- at these pressures has the effect of a rising-rate spring under compression. In other words, the tires absorb niggling, low-amplitude/high-frequency vibrations wonderfully. I don't even feel expansion joints between concrete slabs, and chip-seal (the bane of American cyclists) feels as smooth as the best-finished asphalt. However, over large bumps, the tires compress initially, then very rapidly firm-up while still protecting the rim adequately. You do still feel the bigger bumps, but the effect is blunted, for lack of a better term. I'm learning all sorts of things from my experiments. For example, on rough logging roads, I sometimes feel the effects in my neck. I had supposed a front pressure adjustment would best address this, but in fact, a (relative) reduction in rear tire pressure made the biggest difference in correcting what amounted to a pitch-moment.
Amazingly, the bike rolls well with the 2.0 Duremes tires at 2.0-2.5bar. Drop below 2.0, however, and it feels like I'm pushing ("wheelbarrow effect") even though sidewall distortion isn't noticeably increased or even visible.
I'm going to buy a pair of mechanical/analog bathroom scales today so I can see what my actual front/rear weight distribution is at various loads. Digital strain-gauge scales don't work well for this, as they "hunt" for awhile before settling down, and if the weight shifts during the calibration process, the result can be wildly "off". I need something a bit more dynamic so I can see what's happening with weight shifts and load distribution.
I still largely go by Frank Berto's 15% drop method as a guide in determining maximum tire pressures; I use his figures as a starting point. Frank updated his tire pressure article from the original that appeared in American publication
Bicycling magazine many years ago. It is a bit dated (2006) by current standards, but now includes
minimum pressures for 26in/MTB tires in addition to
optimum pressures for narrower tires. see:
http://www.bccclub.org/documents/Tireinflation.pdf The graphed output is linear, so the trendlines can be exended for higher loads.
A bit more about Frank Berto here:
http://www.thedancingchain.com/About%20Me.htmBest,
Dan.