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Continental Survival Protection
2.3 Looking for more tyres? Continental Survival Protection
2.3 Review submitted by Huey Brilliant in mud, hardly ever slip, and have stopped me falling off in ruts due to their bizarre ability to claw into the side of the rut keeping me upright on more than one occasion?! They are also universal, so when the back gets a bit worn, you just swap them over, reverse the tread and you have nice sharp-edged blocks again. Heres whats written about them on the Conti website - weve found the new Pro to be more stable, with a solid feel at the rear when powering up short climbs and good front wheel stability on gloopy off-camber .. Theres also a bit more grip when hauling on the anchors on a rooty or muddy downhill The 5mm deep knobs grip like leeches on most wet surfaces .. in rocky and muddy terrain where traction is at a premium, the Survival Pros cant be beaten ..:
The Contis have a tread very similar to an old Specialized Storm Control (pic below), but are *much* more predictable on tarmac corners. I have a couple of Storm Controls left in stores and I think one will find its way onto the back of the s/s this winter, purely cos the Tioga 2.1 DHs on there at the mo arent that great in the mud and wet (although they are a nice big casing). The Storm Controls are a quite narrow 1.9 and are way unpredictable on the front so Ill have to think of something else there:
I also rate the Continental Vertical Pro. It grips like its mothers life depended on it. I thought the Survivals were good, but these are better but not *quite* so good in all conditions due to the closer tread spacing. Whilst they are exceptional when it starts to dry out a bit, they would wear quicker due to the smaller tread (although they are universal front or rear, so can be swapped). They could be a 3-season choice on something like the Jekyll (or Santa Cruz):
The Verticals are probably the only competitor to my previous favourite all-rounder, the IRC Mythos, which both Sue and I used for more years than the tread would legitimately suggest, but they grip like leeches, even in the slippy stuff, and sadly, we bought the inferior Panaracers as a totally unfulfilling replacement (although today didnt seem so bad on them, they are unpredictable and give sketchy grip, losing it just when you dont need it to but then youll know all that cos you ride them too!). Merlin Cycles (£24.99 per PAIR for the IRCs as opposed to Wiggles £21.99 EACH) says: The classic XC front and rear specific tyre set is still the choice of racers and weekend warriors world wide. The Kevlar version now has lower prices offering an even better performance to price ratio:
Looking for more tyres? Price Paid: £26-00
Looking for more tyres? Specialized Team Master Pro 1.9 Price Paid: Supplied with the bike Specialized Team Master Sport Price Paid: £7-00 Looking for more tyres?
Specialized Team Control Pro 2.0 Price Paid: Supplied with the bike
Looking for more tyres?
Specialized Team Control Sport Price Paid: £7-00 SpecializedRockster
Sport 2.1 Price Paid: £5-00 Price
Paid: £40-00 for a pair of Kevlar rubbers (Chainreaction) Looking for more tyres? Mosquito
Cameleon Price Paid: £5-00 Looking for more tyres? Directional Tread - What's that all about? Commonly, a tyre model will be made to be used on both front and rear wheels (e.g. Panaracer FireXCPro, Continental Vertical Pro, etc), but almost always it will work better on the front wheel one way round, and the back wheel the other way round. Direction arrows are moulded on the sidewall of the tyre if this is the case. Only rarely, is it not important which way round a tyre is fitted, such as the Specialized Ground Control (sadly no longer available but a good example of Specialized Ground Control). This tyre could be fitted any which way, allowing you to swap the tyres round throughout their life and get fresh square edges to use. The tradeoff is slightly less grip than a specific tyre. Sometimes a tyre can be front or rear-specific (designed for the front or the rear wheel only). These tyres will mostly have to go on the wheel a particular way round (akin to car tyres that are directional to channel the most water from the road surface, bike tyres are directional to afford the most grip on the trail). Tyres in this category include IRC Mythos (front and rear models), Panaracer Dart (although the 'rear' variant, the 'Smoke' could be used on the front [the other way round]). These too have direction arrows on the sidewall, but they are only marked 'Direction' with an arrow, not 'Front' and 'Rear' with two arrows. Looking for more tyres?
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February
2008
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