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		| weasley | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  weasley
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				|   Posted: 13:41 - 03 Sep 2015  Post subject: All-terrain MTB tyres? |    |  
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				| I went out last night with a group I recently discovered rides out from my village.  We did around 16 miles at a good pace and ended up at a pub.  I will be going again!
 Before meeting them I gave my bike the once over.  I finessed the gears and lubed the chain, cables etc.  Whilst up close and personal with the bike I noticed the tyres (OEM Maxxis Ignitors) were getting a bit thin.
 
 During the ride we covered around 90% off-road which included:
 
 - dry, hard-packed
 - flinty
 - muddy puddles
 - slimy ruts
 - tree roots
 
 The worst part was the muddy rutty bits.  I got a lot of sideways movements which was un-nerving, especially as I was clipped in.
 
 So, with all that pre-amble, any recommendations for a decent, durable, multi-purpose tyre that can deal with mud?  I am not bothered about on-road performance - I ride for fitness not speed, so if I have to work harder on road because of tread blocks, fine by me.
 
 I don't really want to have to change tyres/wheels season-to-season, although will consider this if it is genuinely beneficial (for a hobbyist).
 
 Bike is a 2007 Kona Caldera on OEM components, 26x2.1 tyre size.
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 Yamaha XJ600 | Yamaha YZF600R Thundercat | KTM 990 SMT| BMW F900XR TE |  | 
    
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		| UnknownStuntm... | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  UnknownStuntm...
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		| arry | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  arry
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		| stinkwheel | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  stinkwheel
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				|   Posted: 14:20 - 03 Sep 2015  Post subject: |    |  
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				| I'm rocking Schwalbe Smart Sams on my MTB.
 Been doing quite a lot of mountain biking on my week off last week on a variety of surfaces including gravel, slabs and slimy mud and have no problems to report. The edge blocks catch you and maintain traction in a slide where others would let you down.
 
 I've had Schwalbe Hans Dampfs before too. Their grip offroad was nothing short of superb but they tend to "walk" on tarmac.
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 “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
 I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles.
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		| weasley | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  weasley
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				|   Posted: 17:52 - 03 Sep 2015  Post subject: |    |  
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				| Cheers guys.    
 It seems the Michelins don't come in 26x2.1 (although I guess a 26x2.0 is close enough).  The Schwalbes look good and are attractively priced, plus have an anti-puncture belt (the flint can get a bit pointy and has caused me a couple of punctures).
 
 Might give them a try.
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		| chris-red | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  chris-red
 Have you considered a TDM?
 
 
  
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		| The Tot | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  The Tot
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				|   Posted: 20:16 - 04 Sep 2015  Post subject: |    |  
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				| If you want a good balance between grip and something rollable
 A few of the local trail guys run these on their hard tails and full sussers
 
 
  Schwalbe Hans Dampf front 
  Schwalbe Nobby Nic rear 
 This is my recommended choice to you, if you're a casual trail rider who doesn't do much technical descents OR go down fast downhills.
 
 or my mates who mostly ride/race XC have
 
 
  Specialized ground control front 
  Specialized fast track rear 
 My personal preference on my Enduro 29er is
 
 
  Schwalbe Magic Mary front 
  Schwalbe Hans Dampf rear 
 That said, 60% of the racers at the FOD enduro had this combo.
 
 But I use that bike for everything from commuting (5 miles to work and maybe 10 miles on the way back with 1500ft of climbing and downhill runs), enduro racing, downhill sessions, XC rides and 15-20 mile aggressive trail rides. It's excessive, but if you do a lot of technical riding or steep, gnarly descents with swithcbacks and roots and off-camber stuff, it's worth the weight penalty. I run a ghetto tubeless setup on the Enduro, so I can run 25psi front and rear.
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 The Tot 2019 Z1000SX - 2007 R1
 Never argue with autism
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		| weasley | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  weasley
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		| Ste | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  Ste
 Not Work Safe
 
 
  
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				|   Posted: 13:45 - 12 Nov 2015  Post subject: Re: All-terrain MTB tyres? |    |  
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				| To name a few:
 Panaracer Fire XC Pro
 Maxxis High Roller II 62a/60a EXO TR
 Continental Mud King ProTection
 Schwalbe Nobby Nic Evo
 Continental Mountain King II ProTection
 
 Have used all of those and would buy again apart from maybe the Nobby Nic's cos they were puncture prone. First three I've used on an 2008 Caldera.
 
 Maxxis High Rollers or Continental Mud Kings would be my first choices.
 
 Offroading on bridleways and byways needs different tyres to when riding at park parks or man made trails.
 
 Wet roots are lethal regardless of what tyres you have. Cold damp country lanes covered in leaves aren't ideal either.
   
 You need a choice of tyres.
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		| sidewinder | This post is not being displayed . | 
	
		|  sidewinder
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        |  | Old Thread Alert! 
 The last post was made 9 years, 353 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful?
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