pmcdonald
Well-Known Member
I feel like I'm chasing a unicorn here, but if you'll humour me for a moment...
I ride 95% commuter pathways and roads, with 5% fire trails and single track exploring. My setup is a Giant Explore E+1 running Marathon Plus tyres and Tannus Armour inserts. It's been a brilliant combo for commuting. They're heavy but fast rolling, and have had zero flats since install about 5000 km ago.
I run them at about 60 - 70 psi but drop them down to 30 psi for the odd trail adventure. It's still a very squirrely setup on loose rock and steep inclines. The Explore is no hardcore trail monster. It's kitted out with rack, lights and fenders and my aggressive commuter geometry (high seat, low bars) so I'm under no illusions about what it's capable of. But this setup isn't ideal for the types of tracks I'm starting to explore. Here's an example of a few of them:
.
Are there any tyres out there that can retain some of the bulletproof puncture resistance of the Marathon's but throw a little more grip my way, without being knobbly, noisy, draggy beasts? If I took this more seriously I'd look at a second wheelset, but keen to avoid that expense right now.
Thanks for reading.
I ride 95% commuter pathways and roads, with 5% fire trails and single track exploring. My setup is a Giant Explore E+1 running Marathon Plus tyres and Tannus Armour inserts. It's been a brilliant combo for commuting. They're heavy but fast rolling, and have had zero flats since install about 5000 km ago.
I run them at about 60 - 70 psi but drop them down to 30 psi for the odd trail adventure. It's still a very squirrely setup on loose rock and steep inclines. The Explore is no hardcore trail monster. It's kitted out with rack, lights and fenders and my aggressive commuter geometry (high seat, low bars) so I'm under no illusions about what it's capable of. But this setup isn't ideal for the types of tracks I'm starting to explore. Here's an example of a few of them:
Are there any tyres out there that can retain some of the bulletproof puncture resistance of the Marathon's but throw a little more grip my way, without being knobbly, noisy, draggy beasts? If I took this more seriously I'd look at a second wheelset, but keen to avoid that expense right now.
Thanks for reading.