What size bike tire is 700x35c?

What size bike tire is 700x35c?

Here’s the quick answer: In simple terms, a 700x35c tire is roughly 27 1/2 inches by 1 3/8 inches (or 1.38 inches).

What does 700x35c mean on a bike tire?

So 700x35c means 700c diameter wheel with a 35mm wide tire. “When the 29 inch MTB tire size was introduced a few years ago it had the same inner diameter of 622mm, known as 28” in Europe.

Is a 700C wheel 28 inches?

28”/700C/29er The wheel sizes 28”, 700C and 29er or 29” all refer to the same rim size: ETRTO 622. The tyres can differ, but the 28”, 700C and 29er are all the exact same rim diameter. The 700 markings will be followed by the width in mm, and the 28 or 29 markings will be followed by the width in inches.

What is a 700C tire in inches?

All road and cyclocross bikes are built with 700c wheels, which are 29 inches. However, 700c wheels are designed to accommodate a thinner tire. Many come in widths ranging from 18 to 23 millimeters, with touring tires ranging from 25 to 28 millimeters.

What does 700x35C mean on a bike tire?

What does 700x35c actually mean? 700x35c is the dimension of your bicycle tire, as measured using the ‘French system’. Breaking this down, 700 is the nominal diameter of the bike tire in millimeters. The next number, 35, is the nominal width of the tire (again, this is measured in millimeters).

How big is a 700 x 45C tire?

Tire Size Chart Tire Size Circumference in Meters Circumference in mm ISO 700 x 45C 2.242 2242 45-622 700 x 47C 2.268 2268 47-622 650 x 20C 1.938 1938 20-571 650 x 23C 1.944 1944 23-571

Is the 700C tire the same size as the 29er tire?

Also of interest… 29er wheels are actually the same size as 700c which is nowhere near 29″. I’m not sure what marketing genius decided to call them 29ers, but I would think 700c would have gained even quicker acceptance since it was a standard tire size already. I thought it was a totally different size.

What does the number 35 mean on a tire?

The next number, 35, is the nominal width of the tire (again, this is measured in millimeters). The last c refers to the French width code of the tire (i.e. the part you’d see of the tire when looking at your bike whilst standing behind or in front of it). To keep things simple, we can ignore the “c” bit as these days it’s usually obsolete.