First fat bike advi...
 

[Closed] First fat bike advice..... 650b fat???

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Hi all,

I'm just about to buy my first fat bike. I was all set to buy a specialised fat boy, however I then saw treks Farley range - I'm quite tempted by the carbon frames version. I then noticed most fat bikes run 26" wheels whereas the treks now run 650b fat tyres?!?

Would staying with 26" be the best option or is 650b fat worth a punt???

Any thoughts would be welcomed!

Thanks


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:02 pm
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Tyre choice is critical on a fatbike. How many options are there for a 650x4 tyre?

I'd avoid.


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:15 pm
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Mmmm I noticed there's very few choices so far!


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:21 pm
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That'd be like having skimmed milk in your cuppa ๐Ÿ˜ฏ Go full fat or go home imo ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:22 pm
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oink1 - Member
That'd be like having skimmed milk in your cuppa Go full fat or go home imo
The OP is talking about "full fat" 4" tyres, but on a 27.5" rim.


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:25 pm
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scotroutes - Member
oink1 - Member
That'd be like having skimmed milk in your cuppa Go full fat or go home imo
[b]The OP is talking about "full fat" 4" tyres, but on a 27.5" rim[/b]

And I'm just saying - if you want fat tyres, get a fat bike - 26" FTW ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:55 pm
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I had a similar dilemma. I was very close to a Farley 9 and in the end bailed over this limitation.

To be fair, the Hodag is supposedly quite a good tyre, but there aren't many other options...

I went with a homebuild 26x4 in the end...


 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:58 pm
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As long as there is at least one decent tyre why not? I believe their thinking was 650b x 4 to go quick and had loads of space for 26 x 5 when necessary. If push comes to shove a pair of new rims when you need new tyres.


 
Posted : 22/01/2017 12:00 am
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If push comes to shove a pair of new rims when you need new tyres.
And spokes. And the time/cost to build them.


 
Posted : 22/01/2017 12:02 am
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I'm a recent convert to fat biking.

I've been very pleasantly surprised by its ability. Traction and confidence at previously undreamt of levels

The downsides? Accelerating those big hefty wheels up to speed and tyre weight. Both would be worse with bigger hoops

I'd go with a 26er


 
Posted : 22/01/2017 2:03 am
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Worth checking if you can run 26" as well. That way is 650s don't work for you can sell on and buy 26" = costly but problem solved. You might be surprised.

James


 
Posted : 22/01/2017 10:50 pm
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I must admit I work at a Trek dealer and was going to go for the Farley, but in the end there just didn't seem to be a decent selection of tyres so I went for an Ice Cream Truck in stead to stick with 26"

It's awesome by the way ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 22/01/2017 11:09 pm