Studded Tires — Question for Experienced Users
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ShawnoftheDread.
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November 10, 2011 at 7:21 pm #910591
eminva
ParticipantHello —
This year, I’m going to attempt to become an all weather commuter by installing studded tires on my underutilized mountain bike. I normally commute on a road bike, but even the narrowest studded tires won’t fit on it.
So, for those of you who have done this before, do you install the studded tires on your winter commuter and leave them there for the season? Do you swap tires as conditions merit? Get another set of wheels to make the process faster?
If the trails are snow and ice free, I can ride my road bike. My mountain bike wouldn’t get much use over the winter except for snowy and icy commutes, so I’m thinking I can get by with leaving the studded tires on for the season.
What do you all think? Thanks in advance.
Liz
November 10, 2011 at 7:35 pm #932302Dirt
ParticipantI tend to leave them on the bike most of the winter. Last year I switched tires 4 times over the course of the whole winter. There were many rides where I had studded tires on the bike, but only encountered small patches of ice that could have been easily steered around or just ridden over. I haven’t found that it wears the tires out particularly much. I use the Nokian Hakkapelita 700x40c (240 studs) tires on the cross bike or Nokian 294 Extreme (They make a 26″ version) on the mountain bike if it is really nasty.
Like you, if it is truly clear, I just ride a different bike rather than change the tires.
Riding the studded tires on ice is interesting. The traction is amazing… I’d say that it is on-par with the feeling of riding on gravel with normal tires… maybe a little better than that. There’s some moving around and if you really try to lean hard into a turn, you’ll slide, but in general you’re gonna stay upright.
Riding studded tires on dry pavement is also interesting. The studs actually will slip on pavement a little if you corner really hard. You’ve got to lean into it much harder than you ever would for a normal commute in order for them to break loose. I wouldn’t say they’re scary at all on pavement. The really cool thing is the sound they make. There’s no way to describe the clacking, rumbling noise that studded tires make unless you hear them for yourself.
If I don’t know what the conditions are for the day, I tend to run the studded tires.
Definitely play with them in the snow and ice a time or two before you do your first commute. I suggest that with every major equipment change… you don’t want to be unsure of things when you have to arrive at point B at a specific time.
Pete
November 10, 2011 at 7:40 pm #932304Joe Chapline
ParticipantLiz,
Last winter was my first with studded tires, and I just put them on and left them on. My commute is short, and my rides around home, for errands and such, are short. I took the studded tires off in early spring because I was going to go on a long recreational ride. At that point there was still a chance there would be another snowfall, but I figured if I had to put the studs back on, it would be no big deal. I didn’t have to.
I like to keep the bike ready to go and not try to guess what the weather is going to do every day. It sounds like this approach might be good for you, since you have another bike.
November 10, 2011 at 7:42 pm #932305Dirt
ParticipantOne more quick thing… (’cause you know I can’t be that concise in a response).
Studs do NOTHING in loose snow. That’s where the tread pattern of the more aggressive snow tires come in. Both the Hakkapelita and Extreme series are designed to work with snow and ice. Some tires have minimal tread and studs added. Those are AWESOME on hardpack snow and ice, but can spin in loose snow.
I haven’t ridden the other snow/ice tire offerings in the last 5 years… I kinda felt like once I’d tried the Nokians, that I’d reached the pinnacle. Innova, Continental, Kenda, Schwalbe and others make very, very good snow/ice tires. Many are quite a bit less expensive than the Hakkapelita or Extreme tires. I can post somewhat enlightened opinions on their quality and characteristics, but I can’t speak from having ridden them. A friend just got some Schwalbe Marathon Winter tires… Jabberwocky will definitely talk about those when he gets a chance to play with them a bit.
November 10, 2011 at 7:44 pm #932307jabberwocky
ParticipantI have multiple bikes, so I leave the studs on one of them all winter long. Riding the studs on clear pavement doesn’t seem to wear them much, but they are considerably slower.
November 10, 2011 at 8:49 pm #932313consularrider
ParticipantI’ve been using the Schwalbe Marathon Winter studded tires (a 26X1.75 on one bike and 700X35 on another) for three years now. These do not have deep knobby tread and as Dirt mentions they’re only ok in loose snow/slush conditions. If I had it to do over again (and I’m sure I will at some point), I think I’d go with Nokian Hakkapeliitta W106 which has slightly deeper treads. One thing I do like better about the Schwalbes is the refective sidewall strip since I ride after dark a lot. The first winter I had a spare set of wheels from another bike and I would switch them. Then I got a new commuter bike with different size wheels and have just pretty much left the studded tires on from the first sign of ice until sometime in March. Also, take a look at the Peter White discussion of studded tires.
November 10, 2011 at 8:55 pm #932314PrintError
ParticipantI built my custom MTB for the sole purpose of snow commuting. When the white falls, I’ve already got it sitting in the garage on Innova Tundrawolf studs ready to go. I leave them on until spring when I swap back to mud tires and find other ways to break stuff on the bike.
The Innovas do great in slushy snow if you air them down a little. The studs buzz on dry pavement at 60 psi, it’s kinda funny.
WEAR GLOVES WHEN YOU MOUNT THEM… AND JEANS…
Many cuts have been had.
November 10, 2011 at 9:32 pm #932315Joe Chapline
ParticipantAnother reason to leave them on: I felt better with the studded tires on cold days, even when the roads were pretty clear. You get icy patches from snowmelt, water main breaks, problems with household plumbing, construction work, etc. You don’t know what you’re going to find. There were very few days last winter that I needed the studded tires at all, but having them gave me more confidence to take the bike out.
November 11, 2011 at 1:33 am #932322MCL1981
Participanthmm. I think I know where the REI gift card I have is going to be spent now. My boss gives these things to me and then tells me not to buy anything crazy. I’m sure my next one will be to Macy’s instead.
I wonder if it would be beneficial to just buy one spare wheel so I can just quickly swap the front wheel in a matter of seconds. The back is more of a PITA to switch so I would be much less motivated to swap it out based on the weather.
Which do you think is better in snow/slush, the Hakkalakadakawhatever or the Extreme?
November 11, 2011 at 7:40 pm #932346invisiblehand
Participant@eminva 10516 wrote:
So, for those of you who have done this before, do you install the studded tires on your winter commuter and leave them there for the season? Do you swap tires as conditions merit? Get another set of wheels to make the process faster?
If the trails are snow and ice free, I can ride my road bike. My mountain bike wouldn’t get much use over the winter except for snowy and icy commutes, so I’m thinking I can get by with leaving the studded tires on for the season.
What do you all think? Thanks in advance.
Liz
I leave them on for the season. In your situation, given that you rarely ride the MTB, I’d be even more inclined to do so.
November 11, 2011 at 7:44 pm #932347invisiblehand
Participant@consularrider 10531 wrote:
I’ve been using the Schwalbe Marathon Winter studded tires (a 26X1.75 on one bike and 700X35 on another) for three years now.
In another thread, I wrote the following:
@invisiblehand 10542 wrote:
Here are my thoughts on studded tires.
http://washingtonwheelman.blogspot.com/2011/01/schwalbe-winter-tires.html
http://washingtonwheelman.blogspot.com/2011/01/schwalbe-winter-tire-follow-up.html
In short, for riding during icy conditions they make a huge improvement, in my experience. Moderately deep snow with slush, the studs probably don’t do much and I would have preferred tires wider than the Marathon Winters (~44 mm wide). I think that the Marathon Winters are perfect for winter commuting on roads … conservatively, I spend > 90% of my rides on roads. They are durable and the studs are replaceable.
You can find studded tires in 20″, 26″, and 700c. See Peter White.
In your shoes — I believe both 27″-wheel bikes have cantilever studs and will have a hard time converting to 700c … but I could be wrong — I’d go with the MTB. If you stick to roads, then the ~44 mm wide Marathons are a good choice. If you’re going to ride everyday on trails — or have an easy option of doing so — then I would take the speed penalty on the roads and go wider.
November 11, 2011 at 8:51 pm #932351Dirt
Participant@MCL1981 10545 wrote:
Which do you think is better in snow/slush, the Hakkalakadakawhatever or the Extreme?
The Extreme series are more oriented toward mountain bikes, I think. Mine are 29×2.1 and are made to be able to handle pretty much anything you throw at them. They are one of the only non-snow-bike tires (meaning less than 4″ wide) that works well in deep snow.
The Hakkapelitas are more sized and designed for a cyclocross bike. Mine are 700x40mm. They are the most aggressive of the cyclocross tires though. They actually do pretty well in lose snow and slush, though not as well as the Extremes.
I guess the bottom line is what bike do you want to put them on? If the answer is “Mountain”, then the Extreme will do better than pretty much anything I’ve seen. They’re very heavy and you’ll feel that on the hills and on pavement.
I have a good friend who rides year round in Finland…. 4-5 months per year he’s riding on ice and snow. He uses the Extremes every day.
Does that answer your question?
Pete
November 11, 2011 at 10:07 pm #932353ronwalf
Participant@Dirt 10575 wrote:
I guess the bottom line is what bike do you want to put them on? If the answer is “Mountain”, then the Extreme will do better than pretty much anything I’ve seen. They’re very heavy and you’ll feel that on the hills and on pavement.
What’s on the unicycle? I’m threatening to get one for “winter commuting” purposes. My wife is threatening back.
November 11, 2011 at 10:11 pm #932354MCL1981
ParticipantMy only bike is a mountain bike, but it would be for use on the paved road and paved trail. Are the Hakalakadakas “better” than the extremes when on normal dry pavement?
November 12, 2011 at 1:58 am #932357Dirt
ParticipantHakkapelitas are probably better on dry pavement.
The unicycle has an arrow 3.0 DH tire right now, but sometimes I switch to a 3.8 Endomorph for more float.
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