Yes,Steve , the 60 and on up .  Mine has a max with fenders of about 50mm 
or so. 


On Monday, December 7, 2015 at 4:47:35 PM UTC-5, Steven Sweedler wrote:
>
> were any of the larger Bombadil  frames  built for 700 C wheels, Thanks, 
> Steve
>
> On Monday, December 7, 2015, Garth <gart...@gmail.com <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>>
>>    I would never say that any Riv frames are designed around X tires , 
>> that's simply limiting. The clearances are like a balance between chainring 
>> sizes and the bend of the stays, chainstay length and the intention of 
>> designer. Meaning, it's all art ! 
>>
>>    Even with a frame design , each one is unique to that particular 
>> builder so there will always be slight variances of some kind.  So your 
>> frames clearances simply are what they are.  Rivendell may design the 
>> frames and even furnish some lugs, but to have them built they are like a 
>> contractor of sorts in relationship with builders around the world, not 
>> unlike other companies. 
>>
>>
>>   In regards to what iamkeith said about the early mtb's , they did come 
>> with 1.95" tires even in 1982 . My 1983 Stumpjumper Sport came with the 
>> original "Stumpumper" tires that I believe were 1.95" and when I wore them 
>> out I replaced them with Crossroads 1.95" . I used a max tire of 2.05 on 
>> it, a Vittoria Free Climb. The rims were the by todays standards "quite 
>> wide" Araya 7x which I believe were 32+mm's so the tires mounted fairly 
>> true to size. No problems with clearance . I suspect the 26x1.75 written on 
>> the Araya may have been a source of confusion as this referred to the 
>> smallest recommended tire , though I ran Tricross 1.5's on and off no 
>> problemo. 
>>
>> Those Stumpjumper frames were brilliant in the design of the chainstays 
>> and clearance and could have easily been reconfigured today to use wider 
>> tires and still have clearance for even "low q" triple cranks like the 
>> Sugino AT and TA Cyclotourist whihch came on the Sport($495 model) and 
>> Stumpjumper($750).  Our early Bombadils could have used a design like that 
>> ! I always considered the Bomba the fit and ride I always wished the 
>> Stumpjumpers had because they were quite bad in that way. 
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, December 6, 2015 at 11:00:54 PM UTC-5, Chad wrote:
>>>
>>> I'm not sure if I have a odd duck here or not, but tire clearance on my 
>>> early double top tube 650b Bombadil is really tight.  With a 650b x 2.0 
>>> Quasi-Moto (actual width Is about 53mm on a Velocity Synergy rim), there is 
>>> maybe 3-4mm clearance at the seat stay bridge.  Enough for the tire to roll 
>>> through but not much room for mud or rocks.  I was thinking the Bombadil 
>>> was designed to fit the quasi-Motos as there are pictures of early 
>>> prototypes running around with this tire.  I've also run the Schwalbe HS 
>>> 315 "Fatties" (true width 47mm) and Bruce Gordon Rock n Roads (44mm), but 
>>> it would be nice to fit at least a modern 27.5 x 2.1 MTB tire in there.  
>>> Just wondering if anyone else here has experienced this challenge? 
>>> https://flic.kr/p/Bsyew9
>>
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>
>
> -- 
> Steven Sweedler
> Plymouth, New Hampshiret
>

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