Hi Andre,
I am always
very intrigued by your balloon tire threads and want to jump right in with a reply, but don't want to unduly dilute the Sherpa Mks 2/3 thread. Hmm. I think I've found a way to work it in...
...47mm (real width) tyres, that somebody said the the other day would fit, especially if inflated at the low end of the permissible band, and even more especially if not intended to be highly pressured in the first instance, could be a pretty good approximation to balloons, and closer still the smoother the tread.
Ah! The Schwalbe 26x2.0 Duremes I run on my Sherpa Mk2 (and will also nicely fit on a Sherpa Mk3), measure out to an actual 47mm in sectional width and profile (1:1). And...they have indeed been a revelation. When I rode them on the 200km ride up Mt. June and back, I had 65psi/4.5bar in them, and they pounded the snot out of my hands. They weren't bad on glass-smooth roads, but the 17mi/27km of singletrack followed by a goodly distance on benign and malignant gravel is where I felt the excess pressure. I came home, dropped the pressures to 45psi/3.1bar and it utterly transformed the ride without having much apparent effect on rolling resistance. I'm continuing my coast-down studies (cross-referenced with wind data, GPS readings, and bike computer, all as a function of time and distance), and will be interested to see what effect various pressures really have on resistance for these tires at the various weights I carry.
Now (swinging the prow of this post-ship once more toward the land of thread relevance), if one had a Sherpa Mk3 (or the fork from one fitted to a Mk2), then it would be possible to run a wider tire on the front, a la Sheldon Brown's expressed preference (
http://sheldonbrown.com/tires.html under "Mixing/Matching Tires"; subhead "Wider Front, Narrower Rear). Through sad experience, I am wary of too widely mix-matching tire section widths, but a marginally wider front tire, as allowed by the wider Sherpa Mk3 fork, might not be a bad thing, and would add to the "balloon-like" effect, especially if the sidewalls are as compliant as those on my Duremes (or their nearly slick cousins, the Surpemes). However, any comfort gains afforded by the wider-section, lower-pressure tires might be offset by the heavier gauge of the new Reynolds Super Tourist fork blades.
Whew.
From what I can gather, rear spacing of the chainstays and seatstays remains the same on the Mk3, so maximum tire width would be the same at the rear as on the Mk2. Really, we're talking about room for only marginally wider tires at the front (3.81mm, about 5/32" wider section width, 1.9mm/about 5/64in) per side, so given the available sizes, is it best to consider it just that much additional mud clearance?
Best,
Dan.