Stefan Mikes
Gravel e-biker
- Region
- Europe
- City
- Mazovia, PL
@Jon A: My deepest respect to you! You certainly know what you are doing! You have the tool that you have really sharpened and know how to use it!Those JJ's will have less rolling resistance than many popular MTB tires (there is a huge variance within fatbike and MTB tires, depending upon the exact tire of choice). This is an issue exaggerated way beyond reality. When somebody posts about a new eMTB with an aggressive set of tires, nobody seems to act like they're made of concrete the same way as fat tires, when the reality is pretty close with the Enduro, downhill casing-type tires that are popular with eMTB's these days.
Again, you have an exaggerated view of the weight differences. My fat bike is actually lighter than my MTB. Same type of bike (both dual suspension), just slightly higher end build on the fat bike (more carbon, less aluminum). But if you saw them sitting side by side you would assume the fat bike is dramatically heavier. It's not with a quality build.
Here are the weights of the complete wheelsets for comparison:
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And the fat wheelset has 220/200mm rotors vs the 200/180 for the MTB.
If 1 lb, 7 oz makes the difference between being able to lift a bike over a tree or not, both bikes are way too heavy for the user on that trail. I went on a ride recently and had to do that a good 10-12 times (lost count).
View attachment 112412
And yes, it sucked, but mainly due to all the crap bolted to the bike (dual batt setup, rack, panier filled with heavy crap, etc). The fat tires themselves were but a minor contributor. Finally threw in the towel when I ran into this:
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There is no suspension that offers the small bump (trail chatter, etc) compliance that fat tires can.
Have you tried any different tires on that bike? The Juggernaut's are really pretty crappy offroad tires. Throwing a set of Vanhelga's on there would be transformative.
Out of curiosity, what fat bikes have you tried? If you haven't tried a dual suspension bike with modern trail geometry and 27.5X4" tires, you don't really know how fast and nimble a fat bike can be in summer conditions. A lot of people get a little experience on a rigid fat bike with 20 year old geometry and cheap, extremely heavy wheels and tires and assume all fat bikes handle like that. Thankfully, that's not the case.
Which cannot be said about the majority of folk riding their 20" fat tyre folders in cities.