29ers or two-niners are mountain bikes and hybrid bikes that are built to use 700c or 622 mm ISO (inside rim diameter) wheels, commonly called 29â³ wheels. Most mountain bikes once used ISO 559 mm wheels, commonly called 26â³ wheels. The ISO 622 mm wheel is typically also used for road-racing, trekking, cyclo-cross, touring and hybrid bicycles. In some countries, mainly in Continental Europe, ISO 622 mm wheels are commonly called 28â³ wheels or "28 Incher".
29er rims have an interior diameter of and the average 29â³ mountain bike tire is (in ISO notation) 59-622 â corresponding to an outside diameter of about . The typical 26â³ MTB tire has a rim diameter of and an outside tire diameter of about .
In the early 1980s, the size of the wheels for the emerging mountain bikes was undecided. So when English off-road cycling pioneer Geoff Apps contacted Gary Fisher and Charlie Kelly with news that he had built a prototype off-road bicycle that used large-diameter 28 à1þ (ISO 47-622), 47mm wide Nokian Hakkapeliitta snow tires from Finland, they were intrigued. In a letter to the December 2006 issue of Bike Biz magazine, Gary Fisher, speaking about the growing popularity of 29ers, gives his perspective: "We got some tires from Geoff Apps really early on and we [Fisher and Kelly] said 'Holy Toledo!'" But the poor supply situation of the larger diameter tires meant the fledgling MTB industry stuck with the smaller wheel size." The first Geoff Apps-designed 700C wheeled off-road bicycle was made in 1981.
However the bicycle marketed as the Aventura by Apps' own company, Cleland Cycles Ltd, between 1982 and 1984 used the more readily available Nokian Hakkapeliitta 26 à2 (ISO 54-584). The 650B size, also known as 27.5â³, reappeared in 2007 as a compromise between the 26 inch and 29 inch sizes. The 650B size is called 27.5â³.
The name "29er" comes from a bicycle called the Two Niner, which was offered by the Fisher bike company in 2001, according to 1998 Mountain Bike Hall of Fame inductee Don Cook.
The US division of Bianchi Bicycles offered a line of 29â³ wheeled off-road bikes beginning in 1991 called the Project bikes. Their 1992 product catalog raved about the advantages of the larger wheels and showed three different bikes, the Project 3, 5 and 7. Likewise, in 1991 Panaracer developed a 700c version of the Smoke Tire for OEM use on the Diamondback Overdrive and Overdrive Comp mountain bikes. The original company Klein produced a small quantity of a 29â³ wheeled version of their successful "Attitude" MTB racer, and named it the Adept. It failed to find a market and was discontinued.
A key product release, the first true 29â³ tire, was produced by an early supporter of the 29â³ movement Wilderness Trail Bikes. The company introduced the first true 29â³ tire, the Nanoraptor, in 1999. At about the same time, White Brothers produced the first commercially available 29â³ suspension forks. Before then suspension forks used were forks designed for trekking bikes or hybrids. For many years, 29â³ frames and bikes were usually only available from small little-known manufactures like Niner Bikes. Surly Bikes introduced their 29â³ frameset, the Karate Monkey, in 2002. Gary Fisher Bicycles, a division of Trek Bicycles, became the first of the major manufactures to offer a line of 29â³ bikes. Their lines never sold well until the introduction of single-speed 29â³ bike the Rig, in 2004. Today, most bicycle manufacturers in the US market offer at least one 29â³ bicycle or frame.
A tire with a tread width of less than in width is sometimes considered a cyclocross tire by 29â³ enthusiasts, even though in cyclocross any tire wider than is not a cyclocross tire. Although they are both intended for off-road use, and typically use a 622 mm rim, cyclocross bikes and 29â³ wheeled MTBs differ in their basic handling and geometry, construction methods, durability, and intended lifespan. Bikes exist that blur the distinction by combining attributes of both, however. One example of this is a Monstercross bike, often using a standard mountain bike frame intended for use with 26â³ wheels with 700c wheels and 700 à38c-45c tires, disc or cantilever brakes, MTB or cross gearing, and the drop bars of a cyclocross bike.
The advantages and disadvantages of 29ers are often debated in the mountain bike community. Disadvantages of the 29â³ wheel include added weight, perceived sluggishness in handling, and problems with fit (specifically, front wheel/toe overlap and high standover height). Advantages include reduced rolling resistance , perceived increased stability while retaining quick handling, and an enhanced ability to roll over obstacles.
One item that is often raised is tire contact patch size and shape. All else being equal, such as tire width, rim width, inflation pressure and rider weight, the contact patch of a 29â³ wheel has the same area and is slightly longer (~5%) than that of a 26â³ wheel.
Most of these claims have yet to be objectively investigated. Small scale, unpublished studies (including one done by Pepperdine University, reportedly at the request of Gary Fisher) exist but both proponents and detractors of 29â³ wheels are generally unimpressed with their scientific rigor. Long debates over how to conduct a "fair" test of the efficiency of 29â³ vs 26â³ mountain bikes have raged online, but no serious efforts have been made to conduct a large-scale, scientific study.
One variation is to have a 29â³ front wheel and a 26â³ rear wheel (commonly called a "96er"). Using the smaller rear wheel allows shorter and quicker handling frames, more options for rear suspension designs and lighter bicycle weight. Another variation is to have a 26â³ front wheel with a 29â³ rear wheel (commonly called a "69er" though Trek introduced a "69er" in 2007 with a 29â³ front wheel and a 26â³ rear wheel).