Wider tire front or rear?
#1
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Wider tire front or rear?
Hey, its that time of year again, and after a close inspection i decided that a new rear wheel was needed. Now, i can put the front on the back if need be becuase it is a reversible tire. Right now i have 2.1" front and rear, my next tire is going to be a little wider becuase i am in favour of absorbing more while I do some urban riding. My question is simple, shoul dthe wider tire go on the front or rear (on a hardtail)? I have had suggestions in both directions what do you think?
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If I were to add a wider tire, it would definately go on the rear wheel. That is where most of the weight is, not to mention the weight of my butt. My arms can handle more than everything else.
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#3
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Originally posted by Sailguy
If I were to add a wider tire, it would definately go on the rear wheel. That is where most of the weight is, not to mention the weight of my butt. My arms can handle more than everything else.
If I were to add a wider tire, it would definately go on the rear wheel. That is where most of the weight is, not to mention the weight of my butt. My arms can handle more than everything else.
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I would throw it on the front. If you're front tire gets over an obstacle or slippery terrain, your rear is most likly not going to have a problem. This is the rational that I have heard in regards to mountain biking. The wider front tire will also give more grip, as danka24 said previously. It is much easier to control the bike when the rear tire breaks loose than when the front tire breaks losse. A wider rear tire for traction is more of a carry-over from cars. Wider tires in the rear do help with traction to a degree.
-Moab
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You guys have good points. My rationale is mostly on vibration dampening, and load support when commuting. Traction never even entered my mind.
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Originally posted by danka24
The Wider tire goes on the front for grip reasons. You would sooner have the rear wash out than the front. While both washing outs are bad, having the rear wash out can be saved from falling where a front washout results in crashing and burning.
The Wider tire goes on the front for grip reasons. You would sooner have the rear wash out than the front. While both washing outs are bad, having the rear wash out can be saved from falling where a front washout results in crashing and burning.
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Of course, Sheldon Brown has a lot of pros and cons on the issue. His answer: it depends!
- On pavement (smooth or bumpy), rainy or slippery but hard soil: get two similar tires or place the widest on your rear wheel. Roughly 2/3 of you weight is there, so it's logical. (i.e. you can have, say 70 psi with 700x32 front and 70 psi with 700x37 rear, but you would need 90 psi with 700x32 rear).
- On soft or gooy terrain, a wide tire in front makes sense, because it prevents the front wheel from "digging" in the sand. Although if the terrain is really that soft, you probably need two wide tires...
Regards,
- On pavement (smooth or bumpy), rainy or slippery but hard soil: get two similar tires or place the widest on your rear wheel. Roughly 2/3 of you weight is there, so it's logical. (i.e. you can have, say 70 psi with 700x32 front and 70 psi with 700x37 rear, but you would need 90 psi with 700x32 rear).
- On soft or gooy terrain, a wide tire in front makes sense, because it prevents the front wheel from "digging" in the sand. Although if the terrain is really that soft, you probably need two wide tires...
Regards,
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I normally use matched sizes front and back however during those times when I went with dissimilar sizes, I've always gone wider front for better steering authority and narrower rear for less resistance and faster acceleration. Of course this is based on XC MTB experience. YMMV. Also I should probably add that I also ran position specific tyres.
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When i ride downhill fireroads my rear washes out regularly and i never crash. When the front does i go down, period. So if a wider front will prevent washouts better, i'm getting the biggest front that'll fit my bike !
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I have a 2.5 wtb weirwolf on the front and a panaracer xc pro 2.1 on the back. A wider tire on the front gives you more control. just think about it, if you skid out on the back tire you can still recover it. But if you skid out on the front you are screwed. Add the tire to the front
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All very good reasons, the majority says front, so I will go with front, any suggestions on brand? Something cheap, a knobby will do but nothing too aggresive becuase i dont ride in wet conditions, and the trails around here are hard packed.
#15
Still kicking.
Maxxis Bling Bling Dual should balance it out.
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