Which is an "appeal to authority" and a "seems to work ok where we have 
used it". Which is fine so far as it goes, but its not much to go by for 
guessing how applicable either extrapolations of Berto's curves or the 15% 
rule of thumb are outside the domain where we have experience using them.

I hope I don't come across as to critical. I have pulled the equation for 
the regression fit of Berto's curves from the spreadsheet and like using 
it. But I suspect I would do as well (practically speaking) if I just let 
air out of the tires till they squished a good bit when I got on the bike, 
and then just rode it and adjusted for feel.

On Tuesday, June 10, 2014 8:57:33 PM UTC-7, Jan Heine wrote:
>
> Originally, the 15% drop came from the tire companies to whom Frank Berto 
> talked. So Frank then just tried to figure out how to get that value.
>
> Our initial tire testing indicated that somewhere around 15% tire drop was 
> the point where performance and comfort were optimized. Since then, we 
> found that at least for supple tires, even lower pressures don't seem to 
> slow the bike down, so it matters even less.
>
> However, even today, the 15% tire drop values from the chart are a good 
> starting point for experimenting with tire pressure...
>
> Jan Heine
> Editor
> Bicycle Quarterly
> www.bikequarterly.com
>
> On Tuesday, June 10, 2014 4:19:49 PM UTC-7, ted wrote:
>>
>> But I think the real question is whats so special about 15% drop. I can't 
>> recall seeing any supporting argument / evidence for it being optimal.
>>
>>

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