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And at only about 10 times the cost of traditional bicycle tires, you’ll only need to not replace your tires about 11 times for this to be cost-effective!
Give it a decade and economies of scale, and maybe it will get it down to twice as expensive.
It's a human feather.
Humans don't have feathers.
Doigenes walks in in a feather boa.
So you replace your tires twice/year? I do it like every 3+ years. Then again, I don't race or anything, my bike is just for transportation.
I used to ride 20+ miles/32km per day, 4-5 days/week for my commute. Most of it was on an isolated bike path through the countryside, so not much glass and a lot more thorns.
I went from having a dozen or so flats in a few months to having pretty much none just by changing tires. If flats are common for you, better tires could probably help.
Regardless, I'm jealous of you being able to ride your bike that much. My current commute is just too far to commute by bike (it's like 25mi/40km each way), so I end up riding like 1-2x/week just to the local store for groceries.
Tyres last about a year, so this sounds fine
Yup, same. I bought Schwalbe Marathons a few years ago and haven't needed new tires since. They're kinda heavy and don't ride as nice as other tires, but flats aren't an issue anymore.
Either you bike a lot, or you use very thin tires. I bike occasionally, and I still have the original tires on my bike that I've had since I bought it in 2018, I think.
How do you get your groceries? How do you get to work?
Once per year is pretty typical for folks who use bikes.
For those I typically drive because there's no good way for me to do it by bike. But I also put a few hundred miles on per year biking recreationally on a variety of surfaces.
So, yeah, you basically don't use your bike