Big all-rounder tyr...
 

[Closed] Big all-rounder tyres for a 29er rigid - what do you like?

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I have been looking for some voluminous 29er tyres for a rigid to take some of the sting out of trail. I bought some 2.4 mountain kings but they come up more like 2.1 so they are going back. Can any one make a recommendation for big tyres that can be used all year round?

And I am not keen to pay £40 per tyre 🙂

Cheers
Rich


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:26 am
 goot
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On one smorgasbord. Cheap and do the job '


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:29 am
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I am on the same mission.

Hans Dampfs from bike-discount.de if you don't mind the weight, but I do. I still have one on the front but put a RoRo on the rear.

Some people say Maxxis Ardent, they weigh similar but roll faster.

It's easy to slow down a 29er with heavy tyres, all that rolling mass miles away from the axle.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:38 am
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I'm using these at the minute and so far have been very impressed. Cheap as chips too.

http://www.wiggle.co.uk/geax-gato-29er-mtb-folding-tyre/


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:41 am
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I've got Ardents on my Niner, big, grippy, tough and roll well enough.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:48 am
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In summer 2.4 RR on front - just wish they did a snakeskin version. Gato looks good - just don't get UST version - nightmare to mount.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:51 am
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The on one fellas look good, but for me the 2.4 Arden's are brill... Except in mud (horrifically slidey).

Low pressures (even with tubes) on really rocky stuff they are amazingly grippy, and on loose and hardpack, awesome fun.

They have good cush, grip and reasonable weight. No idea of price though, soz!

Kev


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:51 am
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I was considering an On-one chunky monkey for as a front tyre on my rigid ss 29er, but was concerned about added rotational weight.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:55 am
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2.4RR on mine, all year round, even in mud theyre not too bad at all.

If weight not an issue for you I reckon OnOne chunky monkeys might be a good choice too and great value for money at £15


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 9:58 am
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The newer style of Bonty 29-4 is ace. Like a 2.4 Ardent, but more supportive, but with better braking and cornering, and way better in gloop.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:08 am
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2.4RR on mine, all year round, even in mud theyre not too bad at all.

Where from?


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:25 am
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nextdaytyres - not sure any in stock though. That Bonty looks like it's worth a punt.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:30 am
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usually one of the german sites.

Got a pair of super light rocket rons for less than £50 delivered the other day.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:30 am
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bike24.de and bike-discount.de have some stock at a reasonable price.

Although I see that they are spec'd as 2.35" now. (60-622)
the 2.4" come up as 61mm on my 35mm rim.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:38 am
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I have 2.2 race king out back and 2.35 nobby nic on the front of my Gryphon which works ok for most stuff.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 11:23 am
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Stoner do you know if it fits on a Crest tubeless OK? (Hans Dampf 2.35 does - I like the grip of them but man they're heavy).


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 11:27 am
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dont see why not.

Have fitted rocket rons to crest tubelsss, but not the ralphs.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 11:28 am
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Yeah the HD's did.

OK I was looking for 2.35 Rons (I have the 2.25), when you wrote RR did you mean Ralphs?

http://www.bike-discount.de/shop/k669/a56997/racing-ralph-evo-pacestar-29-x-235-tl-ready-folding.html


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 12:02 pm
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Got a 2.35 RaRa on its way, let's give them a spin.

Anyone need a pair of 29 x 2.35 HDs?


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 12:09 pm
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I've got a chunky monkey coming... 2.4 ardents and rara are great and massive but not in the mud!

Be interesting to see if a big roro will be out for 2013


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 12:19 pm
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mattig...I might be, email me a pic...
I've got a Racing Ralph in the older 2.4 & a newer 2.35 on my Niner. They roll not far off a Smallblock8, but actually grip also. (Well, to a point anyway). I'm running them at 26psi & on my fully rigid SIR.9 they give a great ride.
Kenda's 2.2 Nevegal comes up not far off the 2.35 Racing Ralph size. They can be picked up cheap sometimes, they are 850g though, & don't roll great. They grip ok though.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 1:32 pm
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hans dampf front. geax gato or sagauro rear.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 1:43 pm
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Just bought a bargain Bontrager 29-4 for my Inbred 69er experiment. I'm guessing it's the old one as it was half price at the lbs. will it be any good?


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 4:16 pm
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Liked the old one in the dry, but not the wet.... Save it for summer.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 4:19 pm
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No-one's mentioned Purgatorys yet.. so "Purgatory 29 2bliss"

My go-to rigid bike all-round + cheap tyre these days. Ideal size,on a wider rim there's enough volumefor cush but not too wide for soft ground. Good in mixed to wet conditions on the front with a 2.25 Ardent on the back, Purgs F+R when it's wetter and looser, or mud tyres if it's properly grim - Purgatories are fine in the wet until it gets to mud-tyres-or-nothing kind of conditions.

Chunky Monkeys look like a similar kind of block pattern with loads of corner edge, not seen the profile on a wider rim though. May give them a go next.


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 7:29 pm
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FWIW my 29-4 weighs 825g on the kitchen scales. My cheapy wheel with this attached weighs about the same as a small planet 😯

Tomorrow I'll see how it rides


 
Posted : 15/12/2012 10:46 pm
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what kind of sad ****er weighs tyres on the kitchen scales?

ps that's 50g less than my HDs. Ahem.The 2.25 Ron's come in 550g ish (but are blooming fragile, but I switched the rear back to RoRo now anyway) and I just bought a 2.35 Racing Ralph (620g) to switch with the front HD. Doing the simple "grab the wheel and spin it" test, it's quite a difference IMO.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 12:11 am
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no need to be rude, matt. (or are you missing a smiley?)

Some people, me included, take an interest in rolling weight.
And with 29er tyres that can be a big thing.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 12:16 am
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It's OK, Matt's much sadder than me 😆

My daughter was making raspberry coulis muffins enrobed in white chocolate hearts while I was building my wheel in the kitchen so the scales were right next to me


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 12:24 am
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That wasn't rude. You'll know when I'm trying to be rude.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 12:34 am
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+1 for Hans Dampfs from bike-discount.de
Very tall so check you have enough clearance.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 9:11 am
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Using Maxxis Ikon here 29 x 2.20 in standard folding 60tpi dual compound guise, bought from Actionsports.de for £47 the pair. Very surprised by these, grip is great , they roll very well and actually can get away with them in mud/water too. Rode them on local trails and at Thetford yesterday which was rather boggy/very wet on some sections never missed a beat. Lightweight too at Maxxis stated weight of 580g but one came in at 567 the other 583 so quite reliable stated weights.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 12:14 pm
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First ride with my 69er this morning through the Slurry Hills. 29-4 was pretty good but definitely noticed the weight v my old Purgatory-shod 26 inch wheel.


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 1:31 pm
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goot - Member

On one smorgasbord. Cheap and do the job '

what he ^ said.

big enough, grippy enough, made by the same folks that make Maxxis tyres, £15 each, and they go up tubeless a treat (if i can do it, anyone can).


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 2:16 pm
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First ride with my 69er this morning through the Slurry Hills. 29-4 was pretty good but definitely noticed the weight v my old Purgatory-shod 26 inch wheel.

You do realise, with your front axle higher than your rear axle, you're permanently riding uphill?


 
Posted : 16/12/2012 5:55 pm