Hi first time poster with another tyre question ๐
I did do a search but without much success sorry
I'm after a fast 29er tubeless ready tyre for a 200 mile ride, 80% road and 20% off road (canal path/fireroad)
As a starting point i was thinking of furious Fred's ?
Wheel set is Easton EA70XCT
Rider + kit = 75kg
Thanks
furious freds will be perfect
Smart Sam Evo 1.75" could be another option. A little more durable and they have a near enough constant centre tread pattern which makes them fast for smoother surfaces.
Freds are very delicate, I've had one on tubeless but not confident in running it far. Maxxis Crossmarks inflated quite hard would be my choice, almost continuous centre tread
I'm running some of the Smart Sam 1.75's for the sort of riding you describe; I'd recommend them, noticably lighter than the 2.1" Crossmarks they replaced.
Crossmarks are very quick and capable, Geax Saguaro's are impressively quick too for a full size tyre.
Bontrager 29-1 2.0
16.49 each here
http://www.evanscycles.com/products/bontrager/29-1-folding-29er-tyre-ec032920
Any particular reason for going tubeless? If you're doing 80% road and only light offroad I'd be looking at a more touring orientated tyre like the Marathon Plus or perhaps Big Apples.
I believe the folding versions of both will mount tubeless with a Stans kit.
Do you know the quality of the track on the off road section (riden it before?), what time of year is the ride (likely to by drier?). Id be looking at a full slick unless your expecting serious mud on the canal path, fireroads on slicks are fine, just have to take care on corners. Something like a 35mm marathon or ideally something lighter. Infact, id be doing it on a road/cross bike if you could hire one.
Schwalbe marathon mondiale, my adventure racing tyre of choice for mostly road and some off road.
Kenda small block 8 might be worth a look , planet x had them for 10 quid each a while back .
I would say a touring tyre like a marathon or the conti equivalent. If it's 80% road that's where i would pitch it.
Hi
Thanks for all your replies, really appreciate it
SprocketJockey - the reason i want tubeless ready is errrr mmmmmm good point, i just fell back on TR as my default position as i have compatible rims and its what i have always used with no issues and never had a puncture/tear that has not sealed, id certainly have no wish to go back to tubes but guess i could try to seal some standard tyres.
Stato - no not ridden the off sections before but had a look on Google maps and what i can see does look like well maintained canal path and it will be in a few months so hopefully dry, i agree it should be rideable on a slick tyre
So iv narrowed it down to the following
MTB :
* Fred (360g, TR)
* Smart Sam (435g)
* Marathon mondial (760g 28x1.75/825g 28x2.00)
Im sure they will all be fine on the limited off road sections so i guess i should be leaning towards to Mondial as the tread will be faster on the road? it just seems heavy! also are the sizes iv selected correct for a 29er and will it mount up tubeless ?
[url= http://www.schwalbe.com/gbl/en/produkte/tour_city/produkt/?ID_Einsatzbereich=9&showAllProducts=true ]Schwalbe.com[/url]
I've run 2" furious freds, 35c kojak slicks and 2" big apples for roadwork on my 29er.
On the road the freds felt as fast or faster than the other two. The low weight and supple casing seemed to give a nice fast and comfy ride.
The kojaks felt dead by comparison, although this could be due to the the fact that they were the cheaper wired version..?
I also did a fair amount of off-road on the freds and the big apples and both coped fine (although the big apples were interesting in the mud...).
The freds did seem susceptible to flint punctures (2 in 2 rides around the South Downs Way in summer) but I never had any punctures in either the freds or big apples whilst riding on the road or on less rocky fireroad. This is likely to have been helped by the fact that the freds and big apples were run as tubeless.
I run the mondials tubeless, but they had the most porous sidewalls I've ever encountered. Took a lot of fluid and shoogling to seal them. They're not light, so for what you are describing, maybe a semi-slick CX tyre would work better.