Hopefully someone can explain this to me ..
On my previous hardtail with crap front suspension ... I was running an average of 1.2 (18psi) front and 1.4 (20psi) rear with DHF/DHRII and it felt right. If you hit a rock wrong, it would rim, but it generally good in all conditions. Any higher and it started feeling like you were riding a bowling ball - it just felt too hard. Lower and it felt squirmy.
On the Kenevo, with springy things at both ends .. With the Butchers, they felt generally good at various pressures, though if anything, better at higher pressures like 24/26 psi.
Now I'm on the E-wilds with a 2.6 front and a 2.8 rear. I made the switch as the Butchers felt severely lacking in any grip at all on anything which was hard and wet - they were fine in mud though.
In theory, I should be running lower pressures for more grip, but what I'm finding is that I feel like I have more grip running 25/27psi than 18/20 psi.
Is this just a psychological thing ?? or does the higher pressure help the tyre to actually bite in better and when it does slip, it maybe slides more predictably than when it's a lower pressure ???
On my previous hardtail with crap front suspension ... I was running an average of 1.2 (18psi) front and 1.4 (20psi) rear with DHF/DHRII and it felt right. If you hit a rock wrong, it would rim, but it generally good in all conditions. Any higher and it started feeling like you were riding a bowling ball - it just felt too hard. Lower and it felt squirmy.
On the Kenevo, with springy things at both ends .. With the Butchers, they felt generally good at various pressures, though if anything, better at higher pressures like 24/26 psi.
Now I'm on the E-wilds with a 2.6 front and a 2.8 rear. I made the switch as the Butchers felt severely lacking in any grip at all on anything which was hard and wet - they were fine in mud though.
In theory, I should be running lower pressures for more grip, but what I'm finding is that I feel like I have more grip running 25/27psi than 18/20 psi.
Is this just a psychological thing ?? or does the higher pressure help the tyre to actually bite in better and when it does slip, it maybe slides more predictably than when it's a lower pressure ???