In many respects a narrower tyre would be a better solution. A Smoke 2.1 barely cleared in an Axis TT.
As said above, you can check wheel alignment yourself;
- take tyre off, put wheel in
- measure from one chain-stay / seat-stay location by marking it with a bit of tape
[Sliding a wood off cut in the gap would be more accurate; call it an oversized feeler gauge!]
- take wheel out, flip it, put it back in
- measure from the designated chain-stay / seat-stay location.
[If the wood off cut doesn't enter the same gap or is too sloppy then your wheel is not dished properly]
If the wheel is OK, then the problem would lie with frame alignment (or design to allow chain-ring clearance etc.) or
tyre not seated correctly or even a tyre manufacturing fault.
As said above, you can check wheel alignment yourself;
- take tyre off, put wheel in
- measure from one chain-stay / seat-stay location by marking it with a bit of tape
[Sliding a wood off cut in the gap would be more accurate; call it an oversized feeler gauge!]
- take wheel out, flip it, put it back in
- measure from the designated chain-stay / seat-stay location.
[If the wood off cut doesn't enter the same gap or is too sloppy then your wheel is not dished properly]
If the wheel is OK, then the problem would lie with frame alignment (or design to allow chain-ring clearance etc.) or
tyre not seated correctly or even a tyre manufacturing fault.