PurpleFrog
Kona Fan
pimpdriver":o11tjuas said:audax bike (700x25c) or touring bike 700x35c
Nuff said
Wrong. In fact, doubly wrong because you've applied bad logic to incorrect facts. With extra penalty points for applying Sheep Logic.
Logic: what people ride is marketing driven and availability limited, not engineering optimal. People see the TDF on TV, think fast bikes are 700c with tyres as narrow as possible for the load carried, aren't smart enough to do any research and 700c rims and tyres are easy to buy. Otoh, it was very hard to buy fast 26" road tyres until recently, and even now someone like you would probably buy the wrong tyre and conclude that 26ers are slower than 700c on the road.
Facts: the best of these bikes are 650b or smaller with +40mm tyres. (And often low trail.) For example this is Jan Heine's (he's a former holder of a NASA Fellowship and editor of Bicycle Quarterly, so he knows a little bit more about engineering than the average mamil or Internet bs-er applying "Everyone knows" logic):
http://www.cxmagazine.com/gravel-grinde ... k-360-2014
In fact, Heine isn't just someone NASA thought was a marvelous fluffy bunny, he's German. So tremble at the amount of OCD data gathering and experimentation that went into his wheel size choice.
Oh, and Thorn, who make excellent modern tourer/hybrids favour 26 and fat over 700c for a raft of reasons including overall performance.
Oh - and Audax bikes are a silly example because Audax bikes are aero enough (cough... drop bars) for tyre aero to matter more relative to rolling resistance in a way that it can't for flat bars. Which I did explain, but which obviously went over your head.
Useful graph for smarter readers:
..This is why it's smart to use tyres with poor RR but good aero on a dropbar bike you'll push at TDF speeds, but exactly wrong on a flat bar bike with its poor aerodynamics.
In fact, the big bike companies are acknowledging that now fast-but-fat rubber is available they need to introduce new fast bike designs - and the boutique buliders have been making them for a while:
http://www.bikeradar.com/gear/article/a ... umb-37270/
..They're generally 700c and fat though, because betting on the stupidity of the mass market ("Me see TDF ride 700c!") is usually smart. The only problem with 700c and fat rubber is that it makes for less agile handling due to gyroscopic effects and doesn't get you the rollover advantage on the road that 29ers do offroad... what with their being no rocks and roots to roll over.
So: flat bars with narrow clearance, just a bad design - one that is literally never right.