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So there's the Mincing Mary, the Jeycore Joey, the Awsum Archie and, er, the other one.
Which are best suited to passive-aggressive bimblecore lite?
I might have ordered some Nobby Nic 2.25 dual compound folders, ironically they are the 'Performance' version.
From Germany.
Binners made me do it then he ran away.
Are they any good?
There's a list of 27 versions of the NN on Next Day Tyres, but no meaningful explanation of the differences between the casings and compounds.
Any advice appreciated.
They are good*, or bad** depending on your experience.
What is for certain is that the Performance version is to be avoided (made of slippery gloss plastic), and Snakeskin (re-inforced sidewall)versions are the one's you want.
Pacestar (harder wearing, faster spinning) for the rear, Trailstar (softer more grippier) for the front.
That is all.
*Trails
** rocks & pointy things
Oh dear.
Ah well, they can go on the back.
Anything works on the back.
And of course, there's no rocks in Calderdale.
Did I mention they were cheap?
my performance 2.25 alright on the front
tad draggy
but alright.
What German so did you get them from? I want some Muddy Marys for a bit of DH riding and missed the on one deal.
bikediscount.de.
Think they were £17.99.
Pacestar NN on the front and a Rocket ron or Ralph on the back depending on the conditions. Done me well over the year.
As per Mekon on my 26er - The Ralph on the rear is coming apart now (but still holding air tubeless), but it has been ragged for a year so I'm happy with that. Really like the combo for all round riding and the odd XC race.
My Ralph ust lasted two months in Peak District before the sidewall started bulging, outer knobs were falling off left right and centre and the sidewalls not only bulging in places also worn through quite badly
It is a great tyre though out back though but it's no use using round the Peak District 3 times a week unfortunately, Shame as I reckon it's a brilliant tyre apart from the fact it can't handle rocky terrain/ bashing
Now if they made a racing Ralph with proper sidewalls , ala maxxis UST I reckon the Ralph would be the best rear tyre out there
Good point. I'm not sure I would keep the Ralph on the rear if my local trails were rocky (they're woody).
Get the ones with snakeskin sidewalls and go tubeless with some lowish pressures. The dampfs feel very secure despite some gruesome riding on my part. Some people say they're draggy, but I only find this on Tarmac. I found the trailstar a bit soft, knobs tearing off that sort of thing. Quite happy with pace star.