The unicorn of tires? Does it exist?
#1
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The unicorn of tires? Does it exist?
WTB and Maxxis tire user in the past on the gravel/cx bike
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
#3
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WTB and Maxxis tire user in the past on the gravel/cx bike
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
#4
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I love my Schwalbe G-One 40c tires set up tubeless. They're great on nearly any paved and unpaved road surface, but a little wide and lacking in tread for real mud. I suppose if you're not dealing with mud and snow in your CX race you'd be ok. But I haven't raced cross... yet.
#5
Conti SpeedRide. 42c that measures roughly 39 on a 23@50 (same as the Nano 40). Can be supple or hard depending on the air. Can't speak for the CX racing traction and anything wet you could sink in to because it is a file tread but great in everything else you mentioned. Rolls great, assume similar to the G-One. I've got about 1400 and can see getting 2500 miles on the front. The back.. 1500 would be pushing it.
I took off my Nano 40c after 30 or so miles on and off road to try the SpeedRide and stuck with them. The Nano was better off road overall in mud and loose going and stopping, wet roots etc but not as easy and smooth rolling in my opinion.
I took off my Nano 40c after 30 or so miles on and off road to try the SpeedRide and stuck with them. The Nano was better off road overall in mud and loose going and stopping, wet roots etc but not as easy and smooth rolling in my opinion.
Last edited by u235; 09-14-17 at 09:22 PM.
#6
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Ditto, the Conti Speed Ride. Great all around tire. I've put about 1,600 miles on a pair since last November on smooth pavement and rough chipseal, gravel and dry grass/open pasture. It's not a mudder or wet grass tire but great otherwise. Much less tread than the Clement CX tires friends ride, so the Speed Rides sound quieter on pavement and are probably a bit lighter and quicker on pavement.
Decent flat protection, with only one puncture on pavement -- a tiny sliver of glass when I carelessly run through instead of around a small pile of sandy debris, that stuff that accumulates around busy rural intersections. Also had half a dozen other flats, five of which were goat head grass burrs riding across open prairie/pasture (not cultivated grass or park grass, but where the horses and cattle roam). The other flat was a hunk of broken beer bottle under some leaves in the park after a concert.
No flats since January, well over 1,000 miles. Can't complain.
And ditto the Schwalbe Big One, now the G-One. Similar to the Speed Ride's shallow diamond/file tread pattern. A friend switched to that tire last winter, rode it all year including RAGBRAI and other long mixed road/gravel rides. He averages around 16 mph on those big ol' balloons on his steel gravel grinder.
If you prefer something narrower check out the Continental Cyclocross Speed tires. Basically a 700x35 version of the Speed Rides, minus the thin puncture shield. Personally I'd go for the Speed Rides. Less expensive, same tread design, with just enough of a thin puncture shield to do the job in reasonable conditions without excessive weight or sluggishness.
Decent flat protection, with only one puncture on pavement -- a tiny sliver of glass when I carelessly run through instead of around a small pile of sandy debris, that stuff that accumulates around busy rural intersections. Also had half a dozen other flats, five of which were goat head grass burrs riding across open prairie/pasture (not cultivated grass or park grass, but where the horses and cattle roam). The other flat was a hunk of broken beer bottle under some leaves in the park after a concert.
No flats since January, well over 1,000 miles. Can't complain.
And ditto the Schwalbe Big One, now the G-One. Similar to the Speed Ride's shallow diamond/file tread pattern. A friend switched to that tire last winter, rode it all year including RAGBRAI and other long mixed road/gravel rides. He averages around 16 mph on those big ol' balloons on his steel gravel grinder.
If you prefer something narrower check out the Continental Cyclocross Speed tires. Basically a 700x35 version of the Speed Rides, minus the thin puncture shield. Personally I'd go for the Speed Rides. Less expensive, same tread design, with just enough of a thin puncture shield to do the job in reasonable conditions without excessive weight or sluggishness.
Last edited by canklecat; 09-15-17 at 12:46 AM.
#7
Senior Member
Replying to subscribe, as I'm in the same position as you. I love the Nanos for the varied condition New England dirt roads and trails but something that rolls faster on the intervening pavement would be nice. So far, I've seen all the tires that In considering mentioned except the Gravelking 40. It's getting to be time for someone to do some side-by-side comparisons.
Last edited by ATPAH; 09-15-17 at 05:45 AM.
#8
Full Member
WTB and Maxxis tire user in the past on the gravel/cx bike
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
This season i'm going with some more traditional cross tires, Clement MXP/PDX combo for now, just to mix things up a bit.
After the cross season I'll go back to the wider, more gravel oriented tires I took off recently.
#9
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Just wanted to add that my G-Ones have 2900 miles on them according to Strava. The front tire is barely worn. The rear's center tread is nearly worn flat, but the rest of the tread is in great shape. But it still rides well and has some life left in it yet.
#10
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Schwalbe G-One Allaround 35's
Not so great on loose surfaces such as sand but they are supple and fast on pavement, packed dirt and gravel.
These are racing tires and wear fast but are light and a joy to ride when paired with a light wheel.
-Tim-
#11
Senior Member
clement xlpor mso comes in a 40, relatively fast on pave and gravel, and can be raced on dry cross courses(i did last weekend)
#13
I've been sporting Terrene Elwoods in tubeless mode the past couple of weeks and am pretty happy with them. Compared to the Voyager Hypers they replaced they roll about as fast and there's no measurable difference in my average speed. The Elwoods "feel" like they roll much better than the Hypers on crushed limestone but not as fast on pavement but that may just be my imagination. The ride is noticeably more plush on the Elwoods but from my reading that may be due to the fact they are set up tubeless and the Hypers were tubed. The Elwoods definitely corner better than the Hypers. What I have an issue with is that the 40mm that I have installed on my Vaya measure closer to 43mm on Arc 24 rims which means my fender clearance and chainstay clearance is quite tight.
Last edited by edthesped; 11-04-17 at 03:52 PM.
#14
Senior Member
WTB and Maxxis tire user in the past on the gravel/cx bike
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
#15
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I have Schwalbe Marathon Dureme. Not much flat protection. Installing some Rhinodillo tire liners solved the problem. Good all-rounder on pavement, fire roads, gravel roads and hard pack terrain. At 42c, it can also be used for back-country bike-packing and long-distance touring.
#16
Full Member
Try the Challenge Gravel Grinder Race 38. I think this might be what you are looking for.
Gravel Grinder
Gravel Grinder
#17
Senior Member
I based this decision on your recommendation, so if i have any issues with them, i'll expect you trailside to help out
#18
🤙
Try the Challenge Gravel Grinder Race 38. I think this might be what you are looking for.
Gravel Grinder
Gravel Grinder
They roll pretty quick on the road and def on gravel and hardpack. Only weakness for this tire is loose dirt or sand. But if you have this tire and see the loose stuff coming up, you can handle it and ride it through.
I have the 38c Gravel Grinder Comp and it does so much better than my bikes's stock Kenda Flintridge. Kendas that are so thin and get flats every ride out. Challenge tires are holding up great so far.
#19
Senior Member
WTB and Maxxis tire user in the past on the gravel/cx bike
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
Out of them all I absolutely loved my wtb nano 40c tires
Is there a 38-40c tire that is is not so gravel specific or cx specific that would be classified as a "all-rounder"? One that could also be used to race cx in?
I ride: fire roads, gravel roads, hard single track, sand, cx racing
If I already am on to sometime with the nano's-great. I just have not hear much about racing in them.
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#21
It doesn't exist. That's why there are so many tire threads.
It depends on what you are willing to sacrifice: money, speed, comfort, traction or ease.
It also depends on how serious you are when it comes to racing and the kind of courses you'll see in your area.
Personally, I lean towards setting up for racing while in season. All other rides I'm willing to sacrifice a little bit of speed or comfort in. Once CX ends I'll go back to bigger, faster tires with less tread.
Right now I'm rocking tubeless Clement MXPs and have nothing bad to say about them. Super reliable, not too expensive, great for racing and fast enough for everything else.
It depends on what you are willing to sacrifice: money, speed, comfort, traction or ease.
It also depends on how serious you are when it comes to racing and the kind of courses you'll see in your area.
Personally, I lean towards setting up for racing while in season. All other rides I'm willing to sacrifice a little bit of speed or comfort in. Once CX ends I'll go back to bigger, faster tires with less tread.
Right now I'm rocking tubeless Clement MXPs and have nothing bad to say about them. Super reliable, not too expensive, great for racing and fast enough for everything else.
#22
Senior Member
https://www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/e...-tire/p/09090/
https://ridingagainstthegrain.com/20...0-tire-review/
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#23
Senior Member
Sure it does, and I've already said what it is. The 38mm Bontrager CX0 team issue. It's EXACTLY what the OP is asking for.
https://www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/e...-tire/p/09090/
https://ridingagainstthegrain.com/20...0-tire-review/
https://www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/e...-tire/p/09090/
https://ridingagainstthegrain.com/20...0-tire-review/
#24
Senior Member
#25
Senior Member