Michelin Power Competition review

Michelin Power Competition review

The best, fastest performance clincher we have tested

Our rating

5

Ben Delaney / Immediate Media

Published: March 2, 2017 at 1:00 pm

Our review
The best, fastest performance clincher we have tested Buy if, You want a fast set of dependable clinchers

Pros:

Quantifiably the fastest clincher we have tested; good wear; great grip

Cons:

No tubeless option yet

Updated Feb 2017 to include data from Wheel Energy testing and to improve rating to five stars

Based on BikeRadar-commissioned lab testing, Michelin Power Competition is the best performance clincher on the market today.

Michelin’s new Power Competition proved faster in terms of rolling resistance when tested against the likes of Continental’s gold standard Grand Prix 4000 SII and Specialized’s very fast Turbo Cotton, among others.

Only one of the 10 tyres we sent to testing expert Wheel Energy proved faster than the Power Competition and that was Schwalbe’s Pro One Tubeless. No other clincher was faster.

Also, while the Pro One is undeniably fast, it wears quickly and is prone to punctures because it is so thin. The Michelin Power Competition, by contrast, isn’t paper-thin, which is often the price you pay for super-fast tyres. In fact, in our testing over the past year, we have had great luck with flats and found that the tyres wear at a decent rate.

Wheel Energy tested 10 pairs of performance tyres for BikeRadar and the Power Competition was the fastest clincher Joe Norledge / Immediate Media

Great feel, great grip

I first tested the Power Competitions a year ago in Texas and found them to be light and tenaciously grippy right out of the gate.

Michelin had Team Elevate guide a group of three journalists on a rollercoaster stretch of road northwest of Austin, Texas, which offered a nice variation of hard, tight turns over sharply undulating tarmac. Riding a demo bike set up that morning to my normal measurements, I felt right at home, happy to dive blindly through any corner on the locals’ wheels.

But since testing tyres on ‘feel’ is challenging at best, I felt I couldn’t confirm or discount Michelin’s claims of saving 10 watts over the company’s PRO4 Service Course.

Then, former pro mechanic and longtime tech writer Nick Legan went to France for testing using power meters. There, Legan found the Power Competition to be 23 seconds faster than the Pro4 Service Course over a 5.5km course at the same power. The average for a group of 30 journalists on the same test was 18 seconds faster on the new tyre.

Air pressure is a huge variable in how a tyre feels and performs. At BikeRadar we always keep a close eye on it and try to standardize pressure whenever possible Courtesy Brian Hodes

More BikeRadar road and lab testing

This winter we sent 10 pairs of tyre models to Wheel Energy in Finland for rolling resistance tests. Wheel Energy tested on both smooth and rough drums. The rough drum has metal ridges to replicate the varied surface of a normal road.

In both tests, the Michelin Power Competition came out as the fastest clincher.

Meanwhile, we have had months to ride and race the tyres on a broad variety of surfaces. Our initial impressions have held up — the tyres feel great in terms of grip and comfort, and durability is very good for a performance clincher.

If you want a fast set of dependable clinchers, Michelin Power Competition is the best we’ve tested.

Team Elevate is a UCI Continental pro team that has ridden and raced exclusively on Michelin clinchers for three seasons Courtesy Brian Hodes

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