Marathon plus under snow condition?
#1
Thread Starter
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Joined: Sep 2011
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Marathon plus under snow condition?
Winter is comming and I'm wondering whether or not my newly purchased marathon plus (25c) tires will be okay. By the touch of it, they seem very rough. Has anyone riden their bike with these tyres on snow?
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 1,666
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From: 6367 km away from the center of the Earth
If these don't do it you still have this option
https://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...-Winter-chains
https://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...-Winter-chains
#3
Banned
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 43,586
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From: NW,Oregon Coast
Bikes: 8
a roadie bike in snow , 25mm tires are rather Narrow.
You may have to hang up that bike till Spring..
for transportation when there is snow on the ground is there plowed clean Bike Paths?
I get out the Studded tire Bike when the water from the sky Freezes into snow
and the springs running over the street Freeze to Ice.
but those are not made in very narrow tire sizes , a 35 ~ 40 is more the practical width
in a 700c wheel Bike .. Cross bikes and Hybrids ..
You may have to hang up that bike till Spring..
for transportation when there is snow on the ground is there plowed clean Bike Paths?
I get out the Studded tire Bike when the water from the sky Freezes into snow
and the springs running over the street Freeze to Ice.
but those are not made in very narrow tire sizes , a 35 ~ 40 is more the practical width
in a 700c wheel Bike .. Cross bikes and Hybrids ..
#5
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 1,134
Likes: 2
From: Colorado Springs
Bikes: Borealis Echo, Ground Up Designs Ti Cross bike, Xtracycle, GT mod trials bike, pixie race machine
25mm wide tires are never ideal for snow, I have ridden a similar tire in snow and slushy snow was no problem at all, not much different than wet roads. Packed snow or any amount of accumulation that was not slushy was rather tough to get going in. Don't be afraid to drop the pressures a little if you only have this bike, also if it is an option, sticking to roads that see more traffic usually helps because they tend to get cleared better or at the least the tires from cars will break up the deeper snow.
One big variable, what are your winters like where you live?
One big variable, what are your winters like where you live?
#6
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 2,114
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From: Garner, NC 27529
Bikes: Built up DT, 2007 Fuji tourer (donor bike, RIP), 1995 1220 Trek
I did 2 years commute on the Eire canal 5 miles road 7 canal in Rochester on 25 armadillos...
Fresh snow was ok, ice sucked.
Hardest was the P gravel as the tires sunk in unless I was going at a pretty good clip.
Wouldn't suggest it, but that was what fit on my bike.
Fresh snow was ok, ice sucked.
Hardest was the P gravel as the tires sunk in unless I was going at a pretty good clip.
Wouldn't suggest it, but that was what fit on my bike.
#7
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Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 30,506
Likes: 4,579
From: 25 miles northwest of Boston
Bikes: Bottecchia Sprint, GT Timberline 29r, Marin Muirwoods 29er, Trek FX Alpha 7.0
would these fit your bike? I loved these when I commuted in the winter. they handled absolutely everything. better buy them soon cuz soon they will be back-ordered. I rode them at max pressure and only rarely let out a lb or two when conditions warranted it
https://www.biketiresdirect.com/produ...-tire?ss=13695
https://www.biketiresdirect.com/produ...-tire?ss=13695
#8
Try 45nrth Xerxes. This tire weighs 465g(Measured in our shop) with 140 studs. At 65psi, studs shouldn't contact with pavement, but they will at 35psi.
Schwalbe and Nokian winter tires weigh 900g+ even with 110 studded tires.
Schwalbe and Nokian winter tires weigh 900g+ even with 110 studded tires.





