Interview: Downhill Tire Tech with Maxxis

Aug 19, 2023
by Nick Bentley  


We couldn't talk downhill tires without speaking to the one brand that has become synonymous with the sport: Maxxis. Maxxis' range of DH tires has helped riders grace the podium for what seems like forever. In fact, I'm pretty sure that not a round goes by without a Maxxis rider being on the podium in either juniors or elite World Cup racing.

We headed out into the World Champs pits to find Chris Yates from Maxxis to talk about downhill tires from the brand's point of view. Then we spoke to Lee Huskinson, Laurie Greenland's mechanic, and finally, Sam Blenkinsop, to get a rider's point of view.

Maxxis: Chris Yates

Downhill and Maxxis are probably a pretty synonymous combination. What are your most used downhill tires these days?


Probably the key combination is always going to be an Assegai front and a DHR II rear. A really great combination of a really predictable tire with that Assegai on the front. Good in multiple conditions, good on all sorts of surfaces. And yeah, just tend to be a really, really nice predictable tire. And then the benefits of the DHR on the rear, we've got quite a sort of paddle design to the tread pattern, which gives you both good consistent braking and good acceleration at the same time, with a decent sort of rolling resistance and still quite an aggressive side knob as well when you do get into the turns. Yeah, that's quite a key combination and there tends to be MaxxGrip, predominantly on the front with a DH casing, of course, so dual layers are 60 TPI, so you get that nice solid feel to the tire and then potentially a MaxxTerra, but quite a lot will still run a MaxxGrip in the rear as well, again with a DH casing.

Is there a big crossover between your Double Down and DH casing? With inserts now I guess some people are tempted to run a slightly lighter tire but run an insert? Does Maxxis test with inserts?


Yeah, it does vary. I think probably in terms of enduro, we're seeing more and more Double Down casing tires being used with an insert. I think there's probably a split opinion over inserts. There are a lot of benefits, of course, but as a tire manufacturer, they're not designed around using an insert either. So yeah, it's going to be rider's choice on that front as opposed to sort of a general recommendation from the brand. In terms of DH versus Double Down, I think the benefits of having a slightly lighter, slightly more flexible tire of the Double Down gives you that faster roll in and quicker pickup. The benefits of the DH casing, I would say you can potentially run that at a lower pressure because you've got less deforming of the tire because of the dual layer of 60 TPI. You can debate it long and hard into the night I think about which way you go with that, and every rider will have a feel that they want from a tire, whether it's more damping or if it's a more rigid tire.

We're predicted rain here at Fort William. Is there a big performance window for that classic Assegai / DHR II combination before riders have to move to a Shorty?


I think it will also depend on not just saturation of the course, but probably also how those new sections are holding up. We've been told that a lot of those new sections are quite soft. Actually, if that's the case, then yes, Shorty would be quite useful for biting through that soft stuff because it's not just a wet weather tire. It's also if you get incredible amounts of dust, it will bite through dust as well. The interesting point will be that crossover when it becomes that, whether you're going to get any claggy mud in that sort of woods section as well, that will dictate whether they start to use this because it does clear mud fantastically well, the tread pattern itself is quite wide-spaced, which lends itself to that. These little raised sections between the major knobs as well, and the idea with those is that they don't allow the mud to stick, and when you get a vibration to the tire they will actually help to shake clear some of the mud at the same time.\

photo

Is cutting tires something you support the riders with?


Yeah, I mean, that tends to come down to individual mechanics as well as to how they're cut and how much they take off.

Do you have any top tips for people at home to look after their tires and set them up?


Yeah, it is quite often horses for courses. It comes down to, in some ways, suspension setup as well, how they like to run those, whether they're running an insert at the same time and it is a very personal thing. I think the best thing you can do is invest in a digital pressure gauge. Take that with you on a ride and experiment with different things. Obviously, higher pressure, you're going to have fewer pinch punctures. Higher pressure as well is also going to lend itself to not having to use an insert. However, when you get particularly wet and claggy conditions, if you're riding a lot of rooty stuff, those pressures are going to come down. As a minimum, because we don't actually list minimums, I would say a minimum you're at around 18 psi without an insert. Then maximums, 50 psi, we've heard certain riders who run up into the 30s. But in terms of looking after your tires, probably that minimum pressure is the crucial one there.


photo


Mechanic: Lee Huskinson Santa Cruz Syndicate

What tires does Laurie run most of the time?


Generally he's riding DHR 2s front and rear and 2.4s rather than 2.5s. We prefer the narrow option and a 3C MaxxGrip. They're super tacky numbers.

Nothing crazy going on, pretty much a standard tire you could buy, right?


Yeah, just the standard tire. We do have like an extra insert you can put in which is not production, but it's just to stop thorns coming through really. But every now and then we do switch out to a standard DH casing that is just slightly lighter.

Pressures wise, do you change them up a lot? Fort William is real rocky, does he go up in pressure here?


Generally speaking, our pressures remain the same nearly everywhere, it's very rare that we change. So if it's real bike parky somewhere like Leogang, it's got a lot of high speed turns, we might up the pressures a bit because you just roll the tire a bit more. If you're searching for grip, like you are here at Fort William, although there's a lot of rocks, there's a lot of small bumps and stuff, you need the tire to deform and do its job and deflect out the way of stuff so pressures are actually fairly low for us.

So DHR II's are his normal tire. Do you use gut feeling when to change the tire when it gets too muddy?


Generally, Laurie's really good at riding mud on dry tires so it takes a really bad day for him to switch out to a Shorty or a Wetscream. Yeah, somewhere that's really muddy generally in the woods a lot more, often if it rained badly, we'd switch out to a Shorty. If it was just a little bit of rain and a bit of a mixed conditions, some hard pack dry stuff in the open some slick stuff in the woods we would maybe Assegai up front just to gain you a little bit of confidence there.

No messing around with cutting tires then?


We do cut Wetscreams. I'm quite a big fan. Yeah, at Les Gets a couple of years back cut back Wet Screams were the choice. I don't mind it, it brings back a bit of a throwback to what I raced, yeah we were forever cutting tires. A set of cut Wet Screams go pretty hard really.

Any kind of top tips for people at home for setting up tires, tubeless, that kind of thing?


Not really, just stick to the recommendations. I know some rims you might need to put an extra layer of rim tape on, just to get them to seat well, but yeah, generally speaking like 100ml of sealant in the back, 60ml in the front. Don't like too much sealant in the tire at any time. But probably also don't put too much bike wash on them all the time, I think it perishes them a bit. Some of those cleaners can be pretty corrosive out there. So watch out. Rubber perishes after a little while so don't be riding on ancient tires, even if someone's doing you a good deal on some tires that have been stored for a couple of years I'd avoid it.

photo

Rider: Sam Blenkinsop

What combination of Maxxis do you ride most of the time?


Every time I pretty much run Assegai front and back, 29 and then today I've just tried the DHR on the rear.

Do you run any different tire pressures than usual here?


I've gone up 1psi front and back, so I'm normally 23psi front and 26psi back, but I'm on 24psi and 27psi now

Any inserts?


Inserts front and back.

Same tire width for you front and back?


Yeah, 2.5" front and rear for me.

Casings-wise, do you change them up or are you DH casings consistently?


Yeah, DH casings all the time with the downhill bike, only for the trail bike do I Double Down. On the e-bike same downhill casing and it just doesn't squirm or anything. It feels good and supportive.




Author Info:
Mandownmedia avatar

Member since Nov 28, 2019
259 articles

135 Comments
  • 117 6
 I used to run %brand name% tyres on my bike but now I've switched to %different brand name% tyres and they're sooo much better. You should run them.
  • 1 17
flag Roost66 FL (Aug 19, 2023 at 8:50) (Below Threshold)
 Like????
  • 7 0
 thanks, pro!
  • 97 2
 Ok but i ran %different brand name% tyres once and i got a puncture so you're wrong, idiot
  • 50 1
 @n734535: Well, that's because you're running them at %PSI. Your own fault.
  • 34 2
 I used to run a %brand name% printer and the thing never worked correctly when I needed it to twice a year. Now I've switched to a %different brand name% printer and have concluded they're all primarily frustration machines. As a printer yourself I hope you're not offended.
  • 30 0
 @Mac1987: Well, that's because you're running them at %DPI. Your own fault.
  • 1 1
 At least we're not getting ripped off with tires that we can't even truly take advantage of.
  • 14 0
 You can't be a real HPdeskjet3630 because in order to comment you must've successfully connected with a device.
  • 2 0
 @commental: must be fresh out of the box. They always work great the first day, and just when you get hope this might be the first frustration free printer, they show their true nature...
  • 4 0
 @Mac1987: Ah, you must be another one who hankers after those halcyon days when you could buy a printer, plug in a USB lead, press print and get results. We never knew we had it so good.
  • 28 0
 I still only run maxxis because I am a creature of habit, but I feel like in the last 3 years there have been quality control issues with wobbly casings. I've heard the same from other riders and bike shops but never any mention on bike media. am I out to lunch?
  • 8 3
 You are not fake news. You are
correct. Had a casing blow out on new exo+ DHF on an awkward landing resulting in rim hitting the ground and me crashing. They have collectively the best tread patterns imho. My problem is the casings DD is like putting a 25 pound dead weight with no compliance. Exo+ puncture as easy as Exo and blow out. Schwalbe super trail has served me well only wish they had a DHR clone for the rear of my bike Big Betty is good but nothing i have ever had brakes as well as Dhr.
  • 6 1
 Maxxis wobble with inserts most of the times I’ve installed them. Remove the insert, wobble goes away. Can’t figure out why. Not sure if it matters but it def bugs me.
  • 4 0
 @Dangerhill: my experience has been Big Betty brakes harder than DHRII! Possibly down to local conditions though - and which compounds are being compared of course. ymmv.
  • 1 0
 @AndrewHornor: Super soft 2.6 super trail 29 PNW. I actually think Big B hooks up better for turning but in a straight line nothing brakes better than DHR imo. Im also huge fan of Magi luc mary as a front tire except in summer when the berms are firm.
  • 12 9
 Wobbly casings almost always due to the improper install process. If you're using a tire lever to stretch the last bit of tire on the rim during install you'll damage the tire and get a wobble. This problem goes away when you start installing by hand.
  • 6 1
 @unicornmtb25: I agree but there are still tolerances that from the factory will lead to tire wobble even installed as smoothly as possible
  • 3 1
 Used to always run Maxxis but stopped after getting an assegai (yes tubeless ready) that’s wouldn’t stop weeping sealant and losing air pressure. Went through the full warranty process (yes even mailed the defective tire in) and nothing back from Maxxis. No replacement tire, no follow up to emails, no returned calls. Screw them, my Conti’s have been great. Looking forward to trying the Vee HPL Attack. Too many other good options than to support a brand that has no customer support.
  • 2 0
 @unicornmtb25: I got a wobbly casing second ride out on a dhr DD. Landed on a bit of off camber off a not especially huge drop and the tyre almost touched the frame. Thought I'd pringled the wheel but it was completely straight. That was warranted. Replacement did something similar, and wasn't warranted. Swore off Maxxis for a couple of years after that...
  • 8 0
 Pro Tip: go ahead and take a pic of the bar code on the inside of the tire before installing. If wobble isn't catastrophic, can keep riding and warranty without pulling tire off. Especially nice if running inserts.

As soon as Conti offers more compounds for trail and enduro casings, I'm finally going to move completely away from Maxxis on my bikes and see how it goes.

Maxxis desperately needs to put some R&D dollars into their casings.
  • 1 0
 @unicornmtb25: I have run so many Maxxis tires in the past 8 years. I always use tire levers and I've never had tire wobble issues. I run mostly EXO+ without inserts (Assegai, DHF, DHR2, and Dissector 29 and 27.5).

My only complaints are one of the Dissectors needed three plugs in one month of use riding terrain that shouldn't have caused this (never happened to any of my other tires on the same trails). And the other complaint is the grip loss once the tires get past 60%-ish wear.
  • 1 0
 @dancingwithmyself: I was going to try the Kryptotals, but the weight difference between them and the EXO+'s were too much.
  • 1 0
 @unicornmtb25: why do some dd and DH tires go on easy by hand and some don't?
  • 1 0
 @bnachtigall: varying levels of grip strength
  • 1 0
 @Grady-Harris: ha funny. seriously I have some that mount effortlessly and some that don't
  • 27 0
 how long are they going to be "testing" the DHR 2.5" before finally selling them?
  • 4 0
 they never will.
  • 1 0
 No shit! WHY @Maxxis is this such a challenge/secret/etc?? 2.5 in everything else. PLEASE make the production run of 2.5 DHRII's in the various flavors!!
  • 1 1
 @bman33: Why do you want a wider dhr2?
  • 1 0
 @rrolly: Because is certain jank, a slightly wider rear is much appreciated. Not looking for bloated 2.6 or WT's, but the 2.4 on a DH bike is so narrow.
  • 2 1
 @bman33: Yet many DH pro's not only ride 2.4's, but they ride them on 25mm iw rims. I've ridden the dhr2's front and rear and, for me, I could see a possible benefit for a wider dhr on the front. On the rear more would be gained switching casing and pressures, imo.
  • 1 0
 @rrolly: I have ran a 2.4 for years on the rear. DH and Enduro bike. It works, I only run EX471's so the profile is nice, but now at 49, still riding both bikes, racing where I can....few trips to whistler etc.... a bit of extra meat would be nice. Traditionally I have ran slightly larger in front (same from my BMX days). Zero changing casings on the rear for DH.... DD for the Enduro bike and insert depending on the need
  • 1 1
 @bman33: I get what you're saying, but I guess what I'm asking is what performance-wise are you chasing? When you say extra meat would be nice, what are you after? More compliance? More grip? Larger contact patch? Better cornering?
  • 18 2
 While I don’t feel as cool buying them, I’ve had great experiences running specialized tires. Much cheaper than maxxis but also seem to last at least as long if not longer in my experience.
  • 8 0
 Same. Butcher / Eliminator has been great on my Stumpy and for 25% cheaper it’s kind of a no brainer
  • 6 0
 Started running Butcher Grid Gravity T9s last year, front and rear, and can honestly say I prefer them to Maxxis. Casing feels similar to Double Down, and I find the tread wears much more evenly over the life of the tire, whereas Maxxis side knobs start to get undercut and squirmy-feeling when you still have plenty of usable centre tread left.
  • 1 0
 You can grab T9 trail Butchers for $50 right now and a gravity for $75, direct off spesh's website,

www.specialized.com/us/en/butcher-grid-trail-2bliss-ready-t9/p/187347?color=300425-187347

Which is almost less that a single DD Assegai. Like you said, No. brainer.
  • 1 0
 Agreed, just put butcher T9 2.6, front and rear, £40 each. They aren’t huge for 2.6”, running lower pressures (20/18psi) than I have previously and soft compound feels very grippy on off camber roots…highly recommended.

I may go back to other brand in future, but it will be higher volume and softest compound every time…as for rolling resistance, who cares unless you are racing at a high level.
  • 1 0
 @ethanshredz: I'll second the undercutting of the side knobs. I just replaced a dhr2 on the rear (MT compound, DD casing) with good center knobs because the side knobs are completely blown out. I noticed this started to happen when riding rockier terrain with sandpaper like grip in the dry.
  • 1 0
 @crag79: rolling resistance is a big consideration for me since I bike up some decent climbs to get to the trails we ride. Some tires/wheels are soul-sucking.

I found the Spec tires in our terrain just weren't quite grippy enough on our PNW wet roots and rocks.
  • 1 0
 @rrolly: Valid point about the rolling resistance, my rides haven’t been huge recently, see how they feel on a longer ride in the future. I like the feeling of getting up a technical climb in the wet, definitely improved with softer tyres and pressures.

Odd about the wet roots…I found them really good on wet off camber roots last week…possibly down to lower pressures I’m trying.
  • 3 0
 @crag79: Ya, could be. If I run my pressures too low, then the climbs would be even more difficult. If you get a chance, try some rims with wider inner width. I picked up some with 33-34 inner width and the difference is remarkable. For someone that shuttles or prioritizes aggressive downs they are amazing.
  • 15 1
 I'm a total convert to DHRII on the front. Better braking, faster rolling, lighter than Assegai and tons of cornering grip when well angulated.
  • 5 1
 I find them a little unpredictable on cornering where you aren't leaning into it. The sideknobs are excellent for cornering traction, but prior to having them laid bare, the center knobs are just too wide and skinny to be predictable. Been having a much more predictable bit of traction on DHFs, Assegais, and Kryptotals.
  • 11 0
 @sherbet: I really wanted to like DHFs but after several wash outs decided to try out Assegai and now I'm so happy with it that I would be hard pressed to try something else. Even though new Conti and Michelin tyres should be amazing
  • 3 0
 The Assegai is an amazing tire, but I honestly do think the new Conti stuff tops it. Michi is great traction but at a pretty significant rolling resistance imo.
  • 3 1
 I'm a total convert to a brand that doesn't rip us off
  • 7 1
 @pakleni: this.
For years I ran a DHF and DHR. Always just assumed I sucked at cornering. Got rid of that DHF and it turned out the problem wasn’t me. I’m no Connor Fearon but holy shit are corners easier with an Assegai
  • 3 0
 I've been running DHR f+r for many years, and noticed that Richie Rude and a few others were running that same combo for Crankworx Whistler DH, which is a good indication that it does work well. I've recently been running the Kryptotal R f+r, and that's a very similar feel, but they roll a bit faster when pedaling and tread life is fantastic.
  • 1 0
 @sherbet: My experience was totally swapped for predictability between DHF and DHR. DHF's drove me insane because they had a ton of corner grip- at certain lean angles. And very little at others. A direct swap to the DHR on the front and the predictability was far better for me, even if the all-out corner grip wasn't quite as high I was able to ride them way harder
  • 13 0
 @ Maxxis what do you say to Greg Minnaar at the end of each weekend of racing?
  • 4 0
 He should start gluing his tires onto his rims.
  • 13 5
 Used to run nothing but Maxxis but these days I run either Continental Argotyl or Michelin DH 22…nothing against Maxxis but the grip and predictability of the others beat them these days, imo of course
  • 1 0
 Just ordered some contis on a great sale at jenson. Hopefully they live up to the hype.
  • 3 1
 I found maxxis to be great if the bike is upright but at any kind of an angle they are not as predictable as other brands. I actually like the permanence compound magic mary's from schwable. Which offer insane grip for only 25 euros each.
  • 6 0
 The DH 22 is the best front tire out there for pure downhill. The carcass is very hard and the compound is soft and very durable. Very precise feeling and it is one the most versatile tires in the market,it is good even in the wet and mud. For less than 60€ you can find them,hope the new version with grey logos come soon.
The new wild Enduro front would look like an Assegai 100%.
  • 5 0
 @Roost66: Good luck getting them on without developing carpal tunnel syndrome. Bring a friend get them drunk, let the tires warm up in the sun and use cush core tire levers.
  • 1 0
 @Dangerhill: Thanks for the tip.
Worse then Maxxis dd?
  • 1 0
 Conti are too expensive to give it a try, that’s the only reason I will not buy them. So far nothing can beat Assegai for me, tried DH22, Magic Mary, Griffus, Onza Aquila, Shorty and Minion dhf. I ride 99% of my time in dusty conditions
  • 2 0
 @Roost66: Yes worse than double down in my experience.
  • 1 0
 @Dangerhill: i put my enduro chasing conti on i9 rims and cush core xc without any problem, easier than schwalbe super gravity
  • 1 0
 @HardtailHerold: Agree with DHF and Dissector. Not the case with DHRII and Assegai.
  • 2 0
 @Dangerhill: I happened to have the opposite experience. DH casing on Dt swiss rims and setup is extremely easy.
  • 1 0
 @pisgahgnar: Its going on some WR1 convergence rims sooo....
  • 1 0
 @pasteque51: I have been buying them for $60

I can't find maxxis tires even close to that in the casing i want.. that and their rubber doesn't disintegrate in a single race weekend.
  • 4 0
 @homerjm: The DH 22 is amazing way more grip than the Assegai in Whistler, i ran both the same day in Whistler. The Assegai was like a VW Golf GTI understeering in the corners and crashing, meanwhile the DH 22 was like a Renault Mégane RS grippy AF and fun. Since i switched to Michelin i don't have any flat, while with Maxxis i had 3-4 flat per season, but Michelin tires are pretty heavy.
  • 1 0
 @Dangerhill: Conti tires are very very tight on any rim...Last time I saw someone take care of that Conti DH + Cushcore , was with heavy tire levers and pure brute force...
I can do the same with a Specialized DH tire and my trusted octamouse in a 10th of the time you need for the Conti with my bare hands...
  • 2 0
 @Dangerhill: And don't install them backwards Big Grin
  • 1 0
 My one concern with the Contis is that they’ll be very hard to install. I also wonder how the Enduro casing compares to a double down and exo+.
  • 11 0
 New Continental gravity range have been real impressive!
  • 3 0
 Kryptotal Rear for $75 > DHR for $100
  • 9 1
 Maxxis are great but overpriced. There are so mane excellent tires out now from Spec, Conti, Vittoria, Michelin, etc
  • 9 1
 Specialized tires are so dang good for the money, surprised they are not more popular. Almost like people equate expensive with better?
  • 1 0
 @Henchman21: Well, I heard their older tires weren't good. But yeah I'm running Spesh/Conti now and both are excellent. Better than my old Maxxis even.
  • 5 0
 @Henchman21: A lot of haters just don’t like Specialized anything.
  • 1 0
 Not that they’re any better of a value, but I’d throw Schwalbe in there as competitive performers, too.
  • 1 0
 @TheR: “Gwin went to specialized, so I did too”
  • 7 0
 @TheR:
Spec killed all the small shops in my town...then packed up themselves and split the scene. F#( them with a rusty pie spatula.
  • 4 1
 @TheR: count me in that group.
As a brand they've just done so much lousy crap I feel happier buying other tires no matter how is the price.
  • 5 0
 They mention a DHR in DH casing with MaxxTerra - didn't know that existed. What they really need is to offer a TR DH casing in their dual compound; some of us like getting more than 15 days out of a $100 rear tire.
  • 1 4
 $100? Unless you get them on sale or from TBS, realistic they are going anywhere from $120 to $150 now. I was just in a bike shop here in Bromont, after putting 3 holes in a tire, and they have a wall of $136 tires.

I just purchased a tube and will wait for a sale later.
  • 1 1
 Maxxis part #TB00472600 for 29”
www.universalcycles.com/shopping/product_details.php?id=113279
Pretty excited about this!
  • 4 0
 Maxxis is taking its sweet time bringing bike park spec tires to market. I thought they were announced last summer, but can't find any good info now. Meantime, the very affordable Michelin DH34 Bikepark is basically the tire you seek, though the casing may be closer to Maxxis DD than DH.
  • 1 0
 There’s a wire bead dual compound tubeless DHR2 in 29” that’s effectively their durrable/bike park option. Used to make a DHF DH dual compound as well.
  • 1 0
 @AndrewHornor: Yes!! Been waiting a long time to get a dh casing in maxxtera compound.
  • 1 0
 Never paid one more than 50€
  • 4 0
 @AndrewHornor: they have been available for over a year, but it's up to distributors and shops to order them. Let your shop know you want them and they can check with their distribution network.

TB00435600 29X2.50WT DHF
TB00368500 29X2.40WT DHRII
TB00435500 29X2.50WT Assegai
  • 2 0
 @ARonBurgundy: thanks, and you guys should hype these up! Google hardly knows about them.
  • 1 0
 @Zaeius: not just yet. But there is a DHR 27.5x2.40 in DH casing with MaxxTerra compound so you'll get longer tread life out of that compared to MaxxGrip. Maxxis part number: ETB00472700
  • 8 0
 Will regular consumers ever be able to buy 2.5” DHR II ??
  • 2 0
 This please.
  • 3 0
 Tyre companies damn inserts with faint praise in these articles and I suppose it's an article on DH tyres but in my experience running inserts is one of the best upgrades you can do on a bike. The versatility they provide is huge. One of our local trails has a combo of super rocky loose climbing sandt sections and even some mud. The trail is awful to ride on firm tyres but low pressure with inserts transforms the experience. Low pressure without rim damage and the slower rebour effect inserts provide are a winner.
  • 4 0
 What's the extra liner the mechanic mentioned? Doesn't sound like a Cushcore type insert. Sounds more like an extra liner in the tire itself. Why no follow up on the one unusual thing mentioned in all three interviews?
  • 2 0
 Maxxis still doesn't make a good enough "fast rolling" intermediate + aggressive tire combo. T9 Butcher + T7/9 Eliminator in Grid Gravity in the back has any of their offerings beat (and I've tried them all). The Dissector has terrible tread pattern life (good while lasts), and the Aggressor just lasts forever (unfortunately only available in 60a) while also not being better than the Eliminator. The DHF/R and Assegai are sorted, but you when you want to roll faster it's hard to beat that Specialized combo.
  • 1 0
 I thought I was an idiot for the longest time because I couldn't figure which tire this was in Maxxis's lineup before looking at other brands, and realizing Maxxis doesn't have one
  • 1 0
 It's up to the rear tire, because the DHF (no Maxxgrip of course) should roll quite OK?
  • 1 0
 @SickEdit:

for me, by far the best overall combo for the Alps has been DHF rear and shorty front. Maxx grip, DD or DH. Insert rear. Since the sidewall quality problems arose with Maxxis, I have started to look for an equal alternative and have found in in the Vittoria Mota/Mazza combo, Race version with double ply casing. So far, nothing but joy. I prefer to ride mazza inverted in the rear.
  • 4 0
 Can you please stop with that “Yeah,” at the beginning of each phrase, that’s annoying as hell. We get it, it’s an interview, but it’s really not necessary.
  • 1 0
 *in their best Keanu Reeves impression* Yeah
  • 2 0
 I feel like these articles are about as useless as a unicycle at a downhill race. Nonsensical crap from the brand representative. Nonsensical crap from the mechanic. And more nonsensical crap from the rider. Sigh.
  • 2 0
 I really struggle to understand the price of a Minion Dhf tire The same tire is used for over 10 years with the same compounds. I used to ride Maxxis only , but recent prices made me go elsewhere
  • 5 1
 I like to run my tires with pressure in them
  • 11 0
 That's a low bar...
  • 3 3
 I just got a Turbo Levo and thought oh heck I’ll just swap out these new specialized tires for my usual maxxis dhr and dhf with regular EXO casing because they always work and hold up great. Yeah the back tire is seperating internally, tearing, and bubbling after 450 miles with still a fair amount of tread left… EMTBS absolutely destroy tires! Already had to replace the front too because the knobs got chewed so fast. I tried XC tires on it (Recon race 2.35 and minion ss 2.3 both EXO ) to see if it would increase the range on it at all and got a double front and rear puncture about 3 miles in. It was a nice walk.
  • 3 0
 Haha, double down should be minimum casing on an eeb
  • 3 0
 Spec. tyres are great too, actually.
  • 1 0
 I ran EXO+ for a while on my Range VLT. I noticed that more pressure was necessary to combat rim strikes and sidewall roll. On DH casing now, running less pressure with more traction, fewer strikes and less roll. Much quicker overall.
  • 3 0
 Why didn't you ask Loic Bruni what he thinks of his? And which brand of pen does he recommend for the logos?
  • 2 0
 When will you make a tire that Richie Rude can actually push hard on for a full run?
  • 2 0
 Tech deep dive… umm ok. What “tech” was being referenced in the article title?
  • 1 0
 Schwalbe makes a fantastic presta valve ONLY pocket size air gauge....surprisingly, few options out there, but the Schwalbe one is in my toolkit at all times
  • 3 1
 If its a Maxxis Dissector don't bother with 3C go with Dual compound!
  • 1 0
 High roller II Maxxgrip was my way to go, now on Kryptotals and they seems to be fine, just slower on hard pack
  • 2 0
 Why were they not asked yellow or white or sharpie logo?
  • 1 0
 Ethirteen Grappler and All Terrain…if only the sidewall wouldn’t start tearing apart
  • 2 0
 Bartle Dew
  • 2 1
 dat schmoke?? ohhhhh Suzie! ohhh Suzie!! Schtank schtank? Twisty ones. Ima wait here with the malt liquies
  • 1 0
 Greg Minnaar needs to change tire brand
  • 2 0
 2.5 DHR2 please/.
  • 1 0
 ..
  • 1 1
 I like to run 50 psi front and back just so I can rattle my teeth.
  • 3 6
 I got a flat running 27 psi DH casing dissector yesterday. No insert, but i'm not particularly heavy and i wasn't even riding super hard. I'm so done
  • 2 2
 I got a flat running 32 psi in a DD DHR maxx grip, double pinch flat. Just part of the game.
  • 7 0
 You’re done from one flat?
  • 2 2
 @TheR: i've had multiple flats in the past month that are so bad that i had to get a new tire if i wanted to go tubeless. Starting to think maybe maxxis isn't the holy grail anymore
  • 2 0
 @spencerimre: most flats make the tire leak air, so yes, you would need a new tire.
  • 4 1
 @Roost66: lot of times you can patch em and not need a new tire
  • 2 4
 My tire tech... Buy Maxxis Tires. Tech issues solved.
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