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Is my bike over-tyr...
 

Is my bike over-tyred?

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[#12854639]

Not over-tired, like me, but Maxxis Assegai 2.5/Dissector 2.4 combo in EXO+ seems a bit much for a trail bike? One that I have to pedal along roads and general singletrack whilst on my way to whatever gnar I can find...?

Bike is hard work up hills, these tyres might have something to do with it? I like Schwalbe tyres so something like Wicked Will might be more suitable..?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:40 pm
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What bike are you normally riding? I find it's a bit of a shock moving up/down tyre size if I've been riding a different bike exclusively for a while.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:45 pm
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Depends what you're riding... only you know the answer.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:48 pm
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Is this a stealth "what tyre" thread?

I have Pirelli Scorpion 2.4, they're good, try 'em 🙂


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:51 pm
Shackleton reacted
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Where and what styllleeee of riding?
How gnar do you feel, punk?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:52 pm
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Bike is hard work up hills,

Yes

these tyres might have something to do with it?

Maybe, probs less than we all think.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:54 pm
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I've only ridden the Assegai DD MaxxGrip, which was horrific to pedal.

Which compound is yours?

Anyway, the rear tyre sounds perfect for mixed MTBing. Maybe just get an Exo (or similar) front tyre with a less aggressive tread?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 1:55 pm
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I have a pair of 640g in 29" x 2.4" Wolfpack Speed that are rather spritely, they suit my riding whilst it's dry.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 2:16 pm
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Sounds alright to me. I’ve been riding round for the last few months on an Assegai maxterra 2.5 exo front / 2.3 maxterra dhr2 exo rear. I don’t think exo+ is hugely heavier than exo.

Off to Dyfi in a few weeks so just switched to a wild enduro magi-x 2.4 front / Xynotal enduro / soft rear in the hope they’ll resist punctures better. Especially the rear tyre feels much stronger than the exo tyres coming off.

If you’re just riding flow trails then maybe the Assegai might be a little bit overkill but the dissector is a fairly faster rolling rear tyre.

Don’t know much about the wicked will but an exo+ rekon rolls quite fast (ran one with a rimpact as a back tyre last year) and the schwalbe rock razor (just stuck one on my hardtail at the back) also seems pretty fast but still has decent side knobs for cornering grip.

I don’t mind giving up some rear grip for faster rolling in good weather but I’d rather run something up front that is really grippy.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 2:46 pm
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If you're not aggressively smashing rock gardens often then they're probably overkill. I find the 3c exo fine for rocky peak trails but I'm 75kg and not the fastest. I'd stick a 2.4 rekon on the back and go from there.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 2:54 pm
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How often are you puncturing? How often are you unwantingly sliding out on corners?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:01 pm
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I've done four rides so far. No punctures, of course, but I did wash out alarmingly twice. Not what I expected on tyres like that not what I experienced using Hans Dampf 2.4 soft on my 26er long travel bike doing the same stuff in the same way.

I have never wrecked tyres in the past, but I'm wondering if I will end up hitting stuff faster which will result in more tyre damage? I guess the obvious thing to do is just wait til they wear out and try something else. I could try Hans Dampf again but people don't like them apparently so maybe not.

Really just wondering if that's sensible rubber for a trail bike in general use.. They are both 3C Max Terra EXO+. I guess MaxTerra is the compound?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:09 pm
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but Maxxis Assegai 2.5/Dissector 2.4 combo in EXO+ seems a bit much for a trail bike?

they would be considered under tyred if they were on my trail bike (Have assegai exo+ on front, but DHR II in double down on the rear), so it all depends on you and what/how you ride.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:09 pm
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I bought a Magic Mary/Hans Dampf 2.6 combo for my new hardtail as I had the older version on my full suss in 2.4 and liked them. Seems they have become more gnaar as the Dampf is huge compared to my old one!

Recently changed the tyres on the full suss and after taking advice on here I toned down the rear and went for a 2.25 Nobby Nick. Wowzer, it rolls so much better and makes a noticeable difference. Might be different in the wet but that's what the tractor tyre HT is for!


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:13 pm
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@molgrips - has your new bike got a longer reach than the old one / a longer front centre vs rear centre?

Your tyres aren’t the cause of washing out I’d say - you probably aren’t weighting the front wheel enough


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:13 pm
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Hans Dampf is still a good rear tyre for the summer IMO.

I've got a lightly used 29er snakeskin soft one here, could do you cheap if interested?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:14 pm
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So do you ride out to trails on those?


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:14 pm
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I had that exact combination on my bike, along with CushCore pro front and rear. Mine were both Max Terra as Max Grip wasn't available.

When I first fitted them, along with moving to shorter cranks, I did find them heavier going.

I really liked the Assegai, but never got on with the Dissector. I found it wasn't great at braking, and wore it out pretty quickly, so I replaced it with a DHR in Exo+ which I think is a great combo.

Even though a DHR has more rolling resistance than a Dissector, I'm used to them now, and really like them.

I think Exo+ in combination with CushCore pro is a sweet spot for weight/compliance/puncture resistance, although I do need to keep a close eye on sealant levels.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:19 pm
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So do you ride out to trails on those?

who ,me?

I dont ride out to trails, but I do ride lots of road and flat bits linking sections of trail during a ride, and most of the climbs tend to be on the road.

For complete transparency, I do now pretty much only ride an ebike (albeit a low power one), but even when I was on a normal bike I used the same tyres, and they were fine.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:41 pm
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Exo+ casing and MaxxTerra compound is ideal for trail riding. Smashier riders may want an insert in the back or a heavier casing and some would want stickier compound up front (especially in the wet).

DD and/or MaxxGrip is way way slower rolling.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:41 pm
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Is this your first big travel 29er having switched from 26?

I'm (still) struggling with the same thing on my Rocketmax 3 years in. I think its a combination of the bigger wheels and tyres just being heavier and having more inertia to wind up and the speed with which bikes like this can smash through stuff, meaning you need to run relatively tough/heavy rims & tyres to avoid constant pinchflats or rim damage.

Pointed DH, the RMAx is insanely good, and its a very capable climber on steep winchy stuff, but more traversey give'n'take trails, plus road and fireroad, it just gets to be a bit much like hard work after a couple of hours. I'm riding everywhere feeling like I should be 2 gears higher for the effort I'm putting in.

(currently running a 2.5 WTB Verdict on the front (stupid grip; bit heavy; last forever) and the lightest casing Kryptotal Re on the back with a rimpact (mid weight; better grip than a DHR, less than a Judge))


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 3:54 pm
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3c is overkill on the rear, ime. Would rather run DD/thicker casing with longer lasting rubber on the rear.

Also 2.3-2.4 width is more than enough. There's a reason the enduro guys and girls aren't running 2.6 tyres.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 4:34 pm
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Is this your first big travel 29er having switched from 26?

First long travel 29er yes after a long travel 26. I have owned XC 29ers for a while though. It feels and is very slow on climbs.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 4:50 pm
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I thought you bought a Reactor rather than a Mega in the end? If so that’s not long travel - that’s just firmly mid travel.

I’ve found with my sentinel (alloy with a coil shock and heavier than a carbon reactor I’d imagine) climbs fine - but pedalling / spinning fast and keeping momentum up seems to be the best way to make progress - rather than a slow cadence and gurning. I’ve got a 30t chainring and 10-51 cassette so I can do this quite a lot of the time.

If you keep the momentum up it’ll go up virtually anything and there’s so much grip.

I would imagine the geometry is quite different between an older 26er and a new Reactor - newer bikes tend to feel very stable and less accelerative - but smash through a lot more stuff at speed on the way down.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 5:05 pm
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Those are trail tyres as far as I'm concerned. On the agro end for sure, but still trail tyres.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 5:31 pm
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Sounds a little over tyred at at least in the dry. I only realised how unnecessarily over tyred I was running until I switched to Rekon 2.8F and 2.6R. Around 1.4kg put together for a start...


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 5:32 pm
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It is a Reactor, yes. And I know it's not long travel but it is a replacement for the Patriot and I am comparing it to that. The Reactor is nearly 1.5kg heavier, and whilst the riding position is much better for technical climbing it's just as slow. It's not like I can't - I'm fit enough - it just takes ages. I'd also say that the downhill performance is comparable between the two.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 5:43 pm
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What tyres are people running in their gnarpoon tyres? I let mine down to 20 rear 17 front to see if I could relieve the roughness that was in fact caused by the forks needing a service; this might be part of it. I'm 90kg. I'll whack them up next time.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 5:59 pm
 Yak
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You probably need about 28psi. Maybe a couple of psi less on the front.

That should make a huge difference. 17/20 seems far too low. I am 65-70kg (somewhere in that range) and run 18/21 psi in 2.4/2.5 trail  tyres.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 6:06 pm
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Was the patriot not 180mm travel both ends?

A lot of the extra weight is probably going to be in the wheels and tyres I’d think. Would imagine they ride pretty differently with single pivot vs Horst link and 130mm travel vs 180mm travel. Can’t find the geometry for the Patriot though to have a look at that.

The Reactor should be better under braking them the single pivot - you can brake without it locking out / jacking up etc.

If you want faster rolling but still strong tyres you could stick the dissector on the front and pick up a rock razor for the rear (or if you want matching brands a rekon exo+). Just don’t buy a rekon in exo - it’s made of tissue paper - I holed one about a month back just riding in the local woods - and I’ve never punctured a tubeless tyre before. It had a rimpact in but think the corner of a rock got the tyre between the tread.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 6:06 pm
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DD and/or MaxxGrip is way way slower rolling.

I'm finding this. Last year I went for an Assegai Maxxgrip EXO+ on the front / DHR2 Maxterra Doubledown on the rear and they are noticeably draggier than the DHF Maxterra / HR2 Maxterra Doubledown combo i had before

I'm preferring the Assegai/DHR2 combo for the tech, but it's made longer rides a slog


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 6:16 pm
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Was the patriot not 180mm travel both ends?

Mine is a Patriot 7+ from 2007 which had increased travel, and yes it is 180mm both ends but the fork is adjustable and I run it at 170mm. Also run the shock in the lower position which gives pretty modern angles and wheel base except for a 71 degree seat angle. It's for sale 😉

Under braking, yes the Patriot does jack up but once I fitted a dropper this became not much of an issue. It's a M with 410mm reach and I can move around on it so much that jacking up isn't an issue, I load the rear before braking. Not that I needed to brake very often, tbh!

A lot of the extra weight is probably going to be in the wheels and tyres I’d think.

Probably. The wheels are similar spec but simply by being smaller they are significantly lighter and also feel lighter in use. About 1.2kg for these tyres each according to the internet.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 6:27 pm
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Why couldn't the bicycle climb the hill?

Because it was two-tyred.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 6:35 pm
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i suspect that you are over tyred. lighter, faster tyres will definitely reduce the hard work sensation.

i had an exo+ maxgrip assagai on the front and a continental der something on the back. they were very grippy and had a very forgiving and comfortable ride.  2.5 and 2.4

i won a pair of specialized tyres in a raffle. 2.3 grid trail casing t7 (medium compound) on the back and t9 (soft compound) on the front. the front is a butcher, can’t remember the name of the rear one

they were each 300g lighter than the previous tyres and the rear has much closer spaced tread.  they are noticeably quicker climbing and on the road, but equally less good at descending in terms of dampening (i think that’s the word i want). outright grip seems similar but that’s more to do with my limits being lower than either of the sets of tyres.

the last tyres of this weight that i used got unsealable punctures pretty quickly. these seem to be holding up well, though i don’t ride in an area with jagged rocks.  these tyres seem to be sturdy, but being 2.3 they contain less material, so a reasonable weight.

im enjoying the more sprightly nature they’ve brought to my bike and i’m enjoying the way that they have changed the character of the bike.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 7:08 pm
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Dissector EXO is my summer trail bike rear tyre, rolls noticeably better than a DHR2, especially noticeable on road sections which is part of your riding.

I'd perhaps say you have a big gap of "how much tyre" front-rear with the Assegai though.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 8:13 pm
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I let mine down to 20 rear 17 front to see if I could relieve the roughness that was in fact caused by the forks needing a service;

Are you sure it was washout not a tyre folding under cornering forces?

I'm a big lad, and I've never got anywhere near as low a pressure as some claim to run without constant tyre folding in corners or feeling the rim regularly.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 8:37 pm
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Bikepark, FoD etc 20/20

Trails 22/24

Enduro 22/23


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 8:42 pm
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No. I had a test ride a couple of weeks ago on a modern geo 140/130 bike with a Nobby nic on the front. Lost the front end twice. Loved the bike but was very glad to try it's bigger brother with a proper tyre set up similar to those mentioned in the OP. Even if I go with a "downcountry" travel bike, I'll still put proper agro trail tyres on it.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 9:10 pm
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Are you sure it was washout not a tyre folding under cornering forces?

On that occasion yes, a proper skid.

I run 25 on my XC bike and that's running 2.1s. Of course, it's generally going a lot slower. But because that's my background - I learned in the early days before we even had suspension - I've got a lot of finesse and I don't break stuff. Regarding squirming, I found that used to happen with some tyres at higher pressures, but Schwalbe have always allowed me to run low pressures.

Of course, more grip is always good, but one of the reasons behind getting this bike was to ride some distances to get to the gnarly trails like Wylie or Risca, so some compromise is going to be needed.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 9:18 pm
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For trail centre

2.5 dhf maxxgrip 3c exo front

2.4 Dissector Dual compound exo rear

I find that a good compromise.

75% of braking grip is from the front wheel.

I only use 3C compound on the back tyre come the depths of winter


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 9:29 pm
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Re: the wash out - I didn't like the assegai because of that. Much happier with the greater negative space of the DHF in the loose, dusty stuff.


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 11:10 pm
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Interesting.

Lots of love for Maxxis on here generally..


 
Posted : 14/06/2023 11:46 pm
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Yeah, I feel like there must be something wrong with me, the amount of love the Assegai gets here.


 
Posted : 15/06/2023 12:01 am
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It is pretty dusty out at the moment though and/or hard.

I might replace them in the future with Hans Dampf or something. We don't get proper greasy slop around here much, it tends to be wet roots/rocks with muddy loam.


 
Posted : 15/06/2023 12:06 am
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I’m not wedded to Maxxis - I like trying other stuff and happily mix and match brands front to back.

I haven’t ridden Wyllie but I’ve done quite a bit of Risca - but not Network R yet. All the front tyres I’d use there have a bit of bite - Hillbilly (winter), Wild Enduro (autumn / spring), DHF (summer). Since getting an Assegai I think that’ll actually do 3 seasons for me - I find it more confidence inspiring than the dhf - particularly where you don’t commit hard enough the intermediate knobs still find grip. Maybe the dhf has more ultimate cornering grip but you’ve got to get it cranked right over early.

I tried a 2.3” Butcher t9 and didn’t like it - found it washed out a few times when I wasn’t expecting it to - replaced it with a 2.5” DHF maxterra and much preferred it back to back.

I’ve probably said it already but I’d more willingly lose rear grip for rolling speed.

If the reach on your patriot was 410mm I’d wager whatever size reactor you’ve gone for the front centre is going to be a chunk longer. Even the small is 10mm longer than that. Needs to be ridden more aggressively / front orientated to get the grip. Although the head angle isn’t that slack at 65.5 degrees.


 
Posted : 15/06/2023 9:20 am
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