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Thread: New Season, New Tires, New Thread

  1. #4451
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Alta Wydaho
    Posts
    502
    Been running the Kryp enduro’s this spring as well on the Ripmo. Crazy grip in all conditions and they’re rolling really well too. Wear has been real minimal to date. Zero install problem on the WAO rims too

  2. #4452
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Posts
    670
    I was a total Maxxis nutswinger but have changed allegiances to the Kryptotals F&R, SS front and S rear as of 2yrs ago. They are a touch more slippery on wet stuff, but 98% of my riding is dry desert. Krypts are way faster rolling than DHF/DHR2, AND last 2x as long.

  3. #4453
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Location
    Grand Junction Co
    Posts
    1,092
    Short review on the Continental Dubnital.
    I purchased the rapid race in a 2.4 and there are great things about them but overall I am not entirely sold.
    The good - they are light at about 650 grams. The roll noticibly fast. Grip on compact dirt is very impressive a lot more than the specialized fast trak I was using before up front. Sidewalls feel good for such a light tire less wiggle than I had expected.
    The bad - I have had them for 2 weeks and a number of the side knobs are pulling off. About 200-250 miles on them but they are wearing very quickly. I think as a rear it may be a 350-400 mile tire. The specilized Renegades I have used in the past are more like 700-800 miles.
    They are also by far the scariest tire I've ever used in sand and decomposing granite style gravel. They are a very rounded shape even on a 30mm rim and the side knobs are much taller than the center tread. I can not tell exactly but it seems like on they ride like a narrower tire based on the shape and maybe the taller side knobs are prone to pulling when they find traction? I had these on a race last weekend on decomposing granite laid the bike down going pretty fast when it shifted unpredictably. I've ridden this soil type a lot but had five or ten close calls keeping the bike upright which is way more than normal.
    On the right trails (high alpine Colorado for example) they would be incredible if you can accept the rate at which they wear.

  4. #4454
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Boulder
    Posts
    6,196
    Interested re. Sideknobs. I ran RaceKings for years and would tear knobs off the regular version but was good with the Bernstein. Stinks they may not have resolved that issue.
    Based on the BicycleRollingResistance tests, grip on hard surfaces should be really good- class leading for fast XC tires, so that makes sense.

    I'm a little confused about your mention of shape. Are you saying the casing is round, but with tall side-knobs the profile is more square?
    Are you running 2.4"s?

  5. #4455
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Location
    Grand Junction Co
    Posts
    1,092
    Yes running the 2.4.
    This may not make full sense but I will do my best to explain what I have noticed. In most conditions they grip way way better than anticipated. Very impressive descending confidence in most soil.

    They are quite round. Side nobs are deep but they are way around the casing so the overall shape is still round. On sand and loose dirt, I feel like it rides like a narrower tire based on the shape. IE it dives in a bit deeper and is less prone to floating. Riding on the western slope, when you hit sand, they float a bit less and get pulled around more. I'm actually totally fine with this as most chunks of sand are short and suck regardless. It is also only a little bit worse feeling in these areas.
    The other sensation came from riding out at Buffalo creek and was essentially that in some instances in the loose granite, the side nob is the first thing to find traction and can pull unpredictably. It is possible that this is expanding on me just not feeling comfortable on the tire in loose soil and I was having a hard time balancing. It felt like in sections with some loose soil in the middle of single track, the bike is upright and the tire is skimming along and then the tire would have a side nob grab and want to pull the bike. Think of a concave trail section with some loose dirt deposited in there.
    It may just be me and it is likely specific to loose over hard. I did the Hundo last weekend and crashed once and had 7-8 other close calls which is very uncommon for me. I lived in comfier until recently and rode out there a bunch and while every tire does this sometimes in that soil it was prononuned on the Dubnital.

    That being said, I have not had this problem in other soil types. Good tire. Main complaint is durability.

  6. #4456
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Posts
    13,636
    So I've got this Mukluk fat bike that I put a motor on. It is kinda cool, but the fat ass tires wear out pretty fast and I don't really need them to be so fat anyway since it is mainly for just riding around town in the summer. I have Rolling Darryl rims. What is a skinnier tire with a harder compound that I could throw on there?

  7. #4457
    Join Date
    Oct 2015
    Posts
    918
    Im back on Schwalbe Albert Radials after a month re visiting the Assegai and DHR2 combo. I find the Schwalbe tires have better rebound characteristics, are quieter, smoother, roll faster, and have as much or more outright grip.

  8. #4458
    Join Date
    Jul 2021
    Posts
    197
    If I am running a double down Maxxis rear tire and want something similarly durable am I looking for enduro casing or downhill casing from continental? I feel like I am reading mixed descriptions of enduro being equivalent to exo plus vs some saying it’s closer to double down. Thanks!

  9. #4459
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    North Van
    Posts
    3,826
    Conti downhill casing is the closer equivalent to Maxxis DD. Conti Enduro is more like EXO+.

  10. #4460
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Missoula, MT
    Posts
    23,030
    Can someone explain to me what's so great about the new Continental tires? They all look slow. The cornering knobs look fine enough, nothing very spectacular. For those of us with No Rocks(tm) on our local trails, they look heavy, slow, and unremarkable. I'm not saying they necessarily look bad, just nothing to get so excited about. Also, that rear specific tire looks like a front tire. Is it the rubber compound?
    I'm more excited about the mystery Maxxis prototype that looks like an updated DHF.
    No longer stuck.

    Quote Originally Posted by stuckathuntermtn View Post
    Just an uneducated guess.

  11. #4461
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    1,471
    Quote Originally Posted by D(C) View Post
    Conti downhill casing is the closer equivalent to Maxxis DD. Conti Enduro is more like EXO+.
    Eh, little tougher though. I've borked & rolled my share of EXO+ as a rear, enduro conti I've yet to slice or tear a lug despite my best efforts and sidewalls seem to hold a little better. With the caveat that I've not yet exposed them to shale or pumice.

    And re: what's better. I think in a nutshell they are marginally lighter and roll faster than they look like they should.

  12. #4462
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Los Angeles/Mammoth
    Posts
    1,409
    I would second that. Im running Conti Enduro casings on my bike park rig, and they are heavier and feel more heavy duty that Exo+. They are probably somewhere between Exo+ and DD, leaning towards DD.

  13. #4463
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Location
    NorCal coast
    Posts
    2,251
    Yeah, the Contis roll faster than they look. Enduro Magazine just did a tire roundup where they actually tried to do some lab testing, and their rolling resistance measured in watts is quite a bit lower than similar Maxxis offerings. I suspect quite a bit of that comes down to different rubber layup. Apparently even for their "Super Soft", they use a soft rubber core and a more durable outer, which is the opposite of how Maxxis does it (soft over hard). That makes the Contis roll faster and last longer, at the expense of being less grippy on wet roots & rocks.

  14. #4464
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    1,471
    Replacing a Rekon on a downcountry bike. Anybody find something they like better in this space? Maybe with an eye towards durability? Use is dry eastern WA riding. Sand, dust, rocky tech.

  15. #4465
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hell Track
    Posts
    14,937
    <p>
    Just adding a data point to the Conti discussion: I went from a DHR2 Maxterra DH casing to a Kryptotal Rear Supersoft DH casing.&nbsp; Both paired with a Maxxgrip Assegai up front.&nbsp; Kryptotal rolls faster.&nbsp; Casing feels similar-ish stiffness.&nbsp; The Maxxis DH casing gets noticeably soft when the tread is nearing end of life - the casing just gets beaten soft.&nbsp; So far, the Conti DH casing seems to be holding up a bit better, but I&#39;m only about halfway through the life of the tire.&nbsp; The supersoft conti seems to be wearing similarly-ish to the Maxterra Maxxis.&nbsp; Conti might be holding up a smidge better.&nbsp; (side note - I think the DH casing Maxterra DHR2&#39;s are a softer rubber than assorted other Maxterra options from Maxxis.&nbsp; They wear out quicker and grip better).&nbsp; Grip wise, the Maxxis are maybe a smidge better on wet roots, but the Contis are better than expected.&nbsp; Contis are better for straight line braking.&nbsp; Both are similar for dry cornering support.</p>
    <p>
    So far I&#39;m liking the Contis.&nbsp; Haven&#39;t tried the front yet, but likely will soon.</p>
    <p>
    &nbsp;</p>
    <p>
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  16. #4466
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Posts
    670
    FWIW, I know several guys who changed to Kryptotals from Maxxis, and despite being warned, they over-shot jumps because the rolling speed is significantly faster. Caught them off-guard even though they were warned ahead of time. It&#39;s not a minor change. This is on lines they have done hundreds of times and were very familiar with.

  17. #4467
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Boulder
    Posts
    6,196
    <p>
    Its not that Conti&#39;s are fast, it&#39;s that somewhat Maxxis makes tires that are slow as molasses. Even their XC stuff; People look at a tire like the Aspen and think &quot;That must be fast&quot; because it has no knobs, but it&#39;s a total POS. They only feel fast because you&#39;re barely in control with the lack of grip. Huskier - I haven&#39;t ridden it, but Conti Trinotal (similar pattern, but unlikely better durability) or Xynotal (Can get tougher casings) may fit the bill. A Specialized Ground Control Grid may work. Vittoria Agarro should be pretty tough for a lighter trail tire.</p>

  18. #4468
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    SF & the Ho
    Posts
    11,038
    Maybe I’m used to them and don’t know any better, but I like the Bontrager XR3s and XR4s I’ve been using. They’ve lasted, roll well, and cling on enough that I haven’t died yet. Maybe there’s a reason they suck, but I don’t know what it is

  19. #4469
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    People's Republic of OB
    Posts
    5,311
    Quote Originally Posted by XtrPickels View Post
    it&#39;s that somewhat Maxxis makes tires that are slow as molasses.
    So that explains why I always finish last place in races lol

  20. #4470
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    North Van
    Posts
    3,826
    <p>
    Quote Originally Posted by Huskier View Post
    Replacing a Rekon on a downcountry bike. Anybody find something they like better in this space? Maybe with an eye towards durability? Use is dry eastern WA riding. Sand, dust, rocky tech.
    </p>

    Sticking with Maxxis, you might like the Forekaster. I find its spikier knobs dig into soft dirt better than the Rekon. It has better cornering bite than the Rekon in loose, dry conditions, whereas the Rekon can feel more drifty. Rolling speed is similar, maybe a touch slower but in the same realm.

  21. #4471
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    1,471
    Quote Originally Posted by D(C) View Post
    <p>
    </p>

    Sticking with Maxxis, you might like the Forekaster. I find its spikier knobs dig into soft dirt better than the Rekon. It has better cornering bite than the Rekon in loose, dry conditions, whereas the Rekon can feel more drifty. Rolling speed is similar, maybe a touch slower but in the same realm.
    Thanks yeah that's what I am leaning towards. I run Xynotal on my big bike and find the tread to be dense and shallow. Great for rolling quick on dry roots and rocks but skitchy in loose corners. Conti's cross king looks interesting too if they updated with the new compound.

  22. #4472
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Boulder
    Posts
    6,196
    Cross King is very much an undersized XC tire. Makes for a good front pairing with a Race King rear. I doubt they'll update it as it seems like they're moving away from Race King / Cross King and toward the new tires.

  23. #4473
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    7,269
    Hoping for some remedial help folks.

    After years and years of riding whatever rubber was free or really cheap with various sponsorships or prodeals Im now in the regular retail market for tires. Ive never had a choice beyond 2 companies before and now that I can ride anything I have no idea where to start. Im on a Pivot Switchblade 29 150/160. I no longer race in any way, and while I like going fast Im not sure a slow tread pattern vs a fast one matters much to me. First priority is grip, then durability, then I guess weight - though my days of being a weight weenie are also likely gone for good, I try to keep things light where reasonable. I like to spec my bike for the nastier stuff I do, not the most common, so this is a tire for technical rocks, loose gravel and shelfy stuff. I&#39;d rather be over-tired on smooth stuff, then under-tired when I need the grip.

    Currently looking a 2.4 rear but will also need a front soon. What do I want? I like the looks of the WTB Trail Boss, the new WTB Peacekeeper is interesting but maybe too low tread, I&#39;ve seen your notes about the Kryptotal, etc, but I&#39;ve really been out of this shopping space for a while. What do I want and why? Hell, Ill probably just buy whatever I can find cheap and ride it too long.

  24. #4474
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    slc
    Posts
    19,265
    People I trust seem to love the new Conti's. Michelin Wild Enduro has treated me well for a few years. You can often find them heavily discounted on BikeInn (if it still exists?) and then Jenson will price match. Or at least they used to, my shoulders were too jacked to ride for two years so I haven't bought tires in a while.

  25. #4475
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Location
    NorCal coast
    Posts
    2,251
    For that amount of loose, I'd say Conti Argotal up front, Kryptotal Rear for rear. Enduro casing minimum, Super Soft front (that exists now for Enduro if you look for it). Maxxis High Roller 3 is really similar to the Argo, and seriously good in loose over hard, just wears out faster than Conti.

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