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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 386
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Hi All, does anyone have any experience of Conti Twister Pros - the ones that fold up!
Seen some on sale at bicyclerubber.com and as I use folders exclusively on my road bike I am keen to try them for the MTB too. If you have used them, please let me know how you rate them. Are they secure fitting etc. Cheers, D |
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#2 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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in message <domaindomain.1hl1gy@no-mx.forums.cyclingforums.com>,
domaindomain ('domaindomain.1hl1gy@no-mx.forums.cyclingforums.com') wrote: > Hi All, does anyone have any experience of Conti Twister Pros - the > ones that fold up! I haven't use those. I have, however, used Hutchinson Scorpion Airlights, and thought them totally useless for Scottish conditions. It's not the Kevlar bead that makes the difference. The Airlights were built with a very lightweight carcase (which does help with folding) and a tread pattern which looked quite pretty but gripped nothing. Off road tyres get much more intimate with much rougher surfaces and many more thorns than road tyres ever have to face. An ultra-lightweight carcase is not a good idea in my opinion. Beyond that, the first and most important thing is to get a tread pattern which will grip on your local combination of surfaces without being too slow. Which raises the other issue. If you're getting excited about folding tyres it's presumably because you want to take a spare with you on a ride, but there are very few tread designs which are good for both front and rear wheels, unless your local surfaces are mostly very firm. My personal choice for around here - mixture of mud, gravel, loose forest litter, and a certain amount of bare rock[1] - are WTB Velociraptors, which are available with Kevlar bead, but the front and back are very different. [1] They're not good on wet bare rock, but they're sufficiently good on the other surfaces that I forgive them -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; not so much a refugee from reality, more a bogus ;; asylum seeker |
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#3 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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"domaindomain" <domaindomain.1hl1gy@no-mx.forums.cyclingforums.com> wrote:
> Hi All, does anyone have any experience of Conti Twister Pros - > the ones that fold up! > Seen some on sale at bicyclerubber.com and as I use folders > exclusively on my road bike I am keen to try them for the MTB too. > If you have used them, please let me know how you rate them. > Are they secure fitting etc. Folding tyres in general work pretty much like their wire-beaded siblings. The Twister is a very light tyre with not much tread thats great for fast riding when things aren't too muddy or rocky. If that fits your intended use, and the price is right, give them a try. James Thomson |
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#4 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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domaindomain <domaindomain.1hl1gy@no-mx.forums.cyclingforums.com> of
cyclingforums.com wrote: > >Hi All, does anyone have any experience of Conti Twister Pros - the ones >that fold up! > >Seen some on sale at bicyclerubber.com and as I use folders >exclusively on my road bike I am keen to try them for the MTB too. > >If you have used them, please let me know how you rate them. Are they >secure fitting etc. I have one folding MTB tyre, not very knobbly, bought as a spare for a long tour and never used, nor ever will be. It's yours for twice the postage as a gift to Oxfam if you want (twice postage is the going rate for bits around here). Email me at urc[at]sandbenders[dot]demon[dot]co[dot]uk if you are interested. -- Be safe: Use smoke detectors OR Sleep with a firefighter Steph Peters delete invalid from incm@sandbenders.demon.co.uk.invalid Tatting, lace & stitching page <http://www.sandbenders.demon.co.uk/index.htm> |