Best dirt / gravel road tires
Moderator: robbosmans
Next month I will be on a trip where there will be long sections of fire roads and forest service roads mixed in with paved sections.
I am wondering what people think of these tires. I am considering clincher only. I have ridden some of these roads in the past with standard 23 tires and although it was do - able, I would feel more comfortable decending with more rubber.
Vittoria Open Pave 24mm
Michelin ProRace2 25mm
Continental has a few models in 25mm
Other suggestions or comments will be appreciated.
EDIT: I made it a poll question
I am wondering what people think of these tires. I am considering clincher only. I have ridden some of these roads in the past with standard 23 tires and although it was do - able, I would feel more comfortable decending with more rubber.
Vittoria Open Pave 24mm
Michelin ProRace2 25mm
Continental has a few models in 25mm
Other suggestions or comments will be appreciated.
EDIT: I made it a poll question
Last edited by Gregorio on Wed Jun 04, 2008 3:03 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Of those the Continental Ultra Gator skin is the best choice.
I do tons of gravel rides in the off season, and they hold up well to gravel.
The other two are good tires, but not first choices for gravel roads.
I do tons of gravel rides in the off season, and they hold up well to gravel.
The other two are good tires, but not first choices for gravel roads.
This forum would be a better place if you had to know what you were talking about prior to posting. And if you took yourself less seriously.
Visit starbike.com Online Retailer for HighEnd cycling components
Great Prices ✓ Broad Selection ✓ Worldwide Delivery ✓
www.starbike.com
I think ProCycling Magazine just did a test on tires best suited for this......and I think they liked the Open Pave 25mm.......You might also try the GP4000 4-Season 25mm or a Schwalbe Stelvio in a 25mm
green jacket, gold jacket...who gives a sh*t
- Stolichnaya
- Posts: 2621
- Joined: Wed Oct 06, 2004 6:55 pm
- Location: Vienna, AUT
Check out the fatties that Hampsten is using on his Strada Biancha bike - Jack Brown's from Rivendell. The Barcalounger of road tires. No not WW as an item, but they will go anywhere in comfy style. Good enough for Andy...
http://www.hampsten.com/Bikes/GravelRoa ... ianca.html
http://www.hampsten.com/Bikes/GravelRoa ... ianca.html
Those would never fit my frame. I do need tires that are still good on the paved road too. probably 70% paved and 30% fire roads (relatively smooth dirt and some gravel)
I think the Continental Ultra Gatorskins would be painfully slow on the paved sections at 300g, I could be wrong...
I think the Continental Ultra Gatorskins would be painfully slow on the paved sections at 300g, I could be wrong...
I've been riding 28mm Conti Ultra Gatorskins on my cross bike since early December. They're not the fastest ever on the road, but I certainly wouldn't call them painfully slow. Keeping up with others in a group and doing my bit on the front certainly isn't a problem, and I definitely appreciate the extra comfort from the big tyres.
I'd say go for the biggest you can fit in your frame, and consider tubs if you can.
I'd say go for the biggest you can fit in your frame, and consider tubs if you can.
are the bontrager hardcase and the specialized armadillo to heavy
i have been temped to the race x lite hardcase and the specialized roubaix and others but not had the chance because i dont need tires that foolproof
i have been temped to the race x lite hardcase and the specialized roubaix and others but not had the chance because i dont need tires that foolproof
The Conti GP4 Seasons. Not too bad on the road, great on gravel and remarkably tough. Wear well. Only thing is to make sure that your first 30 - 50 kms are on dry roads to get rid of the mold release agent, it's super slippery on wet roads, once it's scrubbed off there's ample grip. Other alternative is a quick wipe with 400 grit sandpaper.
Of course some big volume tubs are a far better choice. I run the Conti Competition Protection 25s. Not light, but bombproof and great on the road. The cornering, esp in the wet is inspiring. Again, check out the Velonews review for some other options.
Of course some big volume tubs are a far better choice. I run the Conti Competition Protection 25s. Not light, but bombproof and great on the road. The cornering, esp in the wet is inspiring. Again, check out the Velonews review for some other options.
In what furnace was thy brain?
-
- Posts: 163
- Joined: Mon Nov 06, 2006 8:26 pm
+1 on the conti 4 seasons. I have gone off road easily with no issues. I use them to train on here in the desert because for a clincher they simply will not flat. Knock on wood.
Visit starbike.com Online Retailer for HighEnd cycling components
Great Prices ✓ Broad Selection ✓ Worldwide Delivery ✓
www.starbike.com