Today, Maxxis debuts their new Aspen and Rekon Race tires in a Wide Trail (WT) version. The tires take the popular XC race treads and add volume to meet the demands of modern-day World Cup XC courses.
The tires were designed in conjunction with Nino Schurter and Kate Courtney along with the rest of the Scott-SRAM MTB team.
The wider tread is designed to be used with a 30mm rim and allows riders to run lower pressures for extra grip and comfort. Riders can use anywhere from a 25mm-30mm width rim with the tire, according to Maxxis, however, it's not recommended to use less than a 25mm wide rim.
Aspen WT / Rekon Race WT Details• 29"x2.4" WT size
• Recommended 30mm internal rim width
• Compatible 25-30mm rims
• 120 TPI casing
• Dual Compound, EXO sidewalls
• 720g - Aspen, 760g - Rekon Race
• $70 USD
• Available Summer 2020
•
maxxis.com The Aspen (left) and Rekon Race (right) are now both offered in a 29" 2.4" WT Wide Tread size.
 | The improved traction from the WT XC tires helps control the bike in difficult sections. I can ride at the limit while still being in control of my bike.—Nino Schurter |
With today's XC courses becoming increasingly technical, the wider tires offer more traction due to the increased width/volume and the ability to run a lower air pressure. The tires utilize a 120 TPI casing and have a dual-compound rubber and Maxxis' EXO sidewall. This also gives more protection from flats and rim damage.
It's cautioned that the tires will fit in many current XC race frames but they do not fit in all of them. There are a number of bikes Maxxis tested for fitment. It's recommended that there is a minimum of 6mm clearance between the tire and all bike parts including the frame and fork to safely run these, or any wider tire. The below frames have been tested and do offer enough clearance for the tires to fit. Don't see your frame? Break out a yardstick and do some measuring.
Rekon (WT) casing however feels more like a Minion level casing and has held up fine. Brilliant tire that.
I see Rekon Races as OEM on fast bikes from Canyon and Mondraker, but can't help but notice that Aspen seems to be a lot more popular on the XC WC circuit. So maybe the elite racers think of Rekon Race as the slower/grippier option?
Anyway, good to know that the 2.25" Aspens in my garage are obsolete before I ever mounted them :-)
Lug height and casing width can each improve traction in most conditions. A large casing with small lugs tends to be faster than the inverse, though there are a lot of variables in play.
For any XC rider who isn't a top-level racer, a bit of insurance in the form of traction is worth the small increase in rolling resistance. This is why I usually recommend something like the Rekon (not Rekon Race) as a front tire, paired with something extremely fast on the rear.
Thanks for the feedback on the Rekon!
And I am STOKED for these. They're perfect for a lot of trails.
Just state the suggested rim width in the spec table and on the sidewall.
I'm glad the XC tires are being offered in these options now. I've been waiting for these for a while now.
Suggested rim width: X mm
Not trying to be sarcastic, honestly curious on why you dislike them
Having been riding DD/DH casings back to back (after I punctured DD) I will never ride DD again. It cannot match DH tires rollover and momentum making your bike feel like it has more travel and bigger wheels. DD is much closer in feel to Exo than to DH casing. My friend just biught aggressor DD against my counsel. Punctured it through Cushcore XC right awayZ
Never tried a DH tyre on a trail bike so have no idea about what you (and other people as well) describe.
On the other hand, my rear DD Aggressor and Rimpact combo seems to be very reliable, rims fail before the tyre+insert combo, but in terms of "feel" are it's not that different from an Exo
It's not even the question of anyone claiming any of those things online being true or not, it's just people's reaction to it. Weird
Sure, maybe he's just exceptionally big and rad, but it's more likely that a lack of skill and shit line choice is a factor.
Sure, maybe he's just exceptionally big and rad, but it's more likely that a lack of skill and shit line choice is a factor
Remind me who's feelings got hurt again?
I keep a set of 2.3 aggressors/DHF on normally for training miles, they're long wearing and I'm way less likely to crash. Plus it makes me feel like a hero when I shed 1 lb from my tires with the race setup!
Still run them though
I dunno about this, I might just get a 2.35 Ardent race for front wheel duties with a 2.35 rekon race rear...From what I can telll the grippy front tire 2.4 WT for XC option seems to be lacking.
Oh and I have 2019 Oiz, just measured it and there's 9 mm of space with 2.25 Rekon Race on 23 mm rim, so it should definitely fit.
How much are you losing by putting a Forecaster up front speed-wise compared to a WT Recon race?
...of life as we know it??!!
Next to standard exo tires with 60 tpi Maxxis does have 120 tpi casings without reinforcement, with light reinforcement (exo), a little heavier reinforcement for cut resistance (exo+) and a dual ply version (DD). The casing thread count is one of the main reasons tires roll faster. Schwalbe has only 67 tpi casings as far as I know.