Best orbea rise light tyre

texano999

New Member
Jan 14, 2023
100
17
Italy
I am 68 kg and ride above all in trail and all Mountain with 150 fork.
Could you please suggest me a light tyre for my application? Size and model

Thanks
 

Tony4wd

Active member
Subscriber
Aug 3, 2022
215
181
Australia
The Maxxis Dissector 29x2.4 Exo dual compound or 3c Maxterra are both about 950 grams. Exo is plenty strong unless you're riding on jagged rocks.
 

Shjay

Well-known member
Apr 30, 2019
835
488
Kent
Not super light but I am running the new continental Kryptotal tyres in trail format & am 93kg about 1000g
Bontrager XR4i are about 850g & good tyres I run on rear in summer with the Conti Xynotal on front with insets in rear
 

mike_kelly

Well-known member
Subscriber
Aug 11, 2022
898
724
US
I am 68 kg and ride above all in trail and all Mountain with 150 fork.
Could you please suggest me a light tyre for my application? Size and model

Thanks
The Orbea Rise is no different than any other MTB. So you choose a tire for your trail surface. I ride on hard packed desert trails so I choose the lightest tire for those conditions. Fast, not very big knobs. WTB ranger, Maxxis Recon, XR4.
IF you ride in wet rooty trails then you might choose something very differrent.
 

LeeS69

Member
Aug 27, 2022
94
104
Yorkshire
The Orbea Rise is no different than any other MTB. So you choose a tire for your trail surface. I ride on hard packed desert trails so I choose the lightest tire for those conditions. Fast, not very big knobs. WTB ranger, Maxxis Recon, XR4.
IF you ride in wet rooty trails then you might choose something very differrent.
Here in the muddy Pennines you need grip above all else...

IMG20230404174453.jpg
 

cookie70

Active member
Mar 23, 2022
200
148
Central Coast, Australia
Here down under, our trails are very mixed conditions, rocks, hardpack, sand etc.. I'm liking the vittoria pairing of Mazza front (ultimate grip) and agarro rear (good rolling)

The Mazza is very similar to Maxxis DHR, bit heavier and tougher. The Agarro is what I'd say is mostly like a maxis aggressor but better rolling and so far better resistance to tearing and holes. probably got about 1000k on this combo and really like it!

1681104136720.png
 

Rubinstein

Well-known member
Apr 7, 2022
404
533
kent
I use Schwalbe rock razor on the rear and a maxxis Ardent race on the front. Fast rolling set up in the dry and surprisingly good in the slop. No punctures last year with a tubeless set up riding trail/AM, both 2.35
 
Last edited:

Borbea

Member
Nov 13, 2022
37
27
Sweden
I’ve used original recon/dissector in the beginning. They are ok. In winter here in sweden I used specialized Butcher T9 front and rear. Not to funny but ok in winter.

Now I use Vittoria mezcal/barzo and so far very good. Running tubless.

FullSizeRender.jpeg
 

jcismo1

Member
Jul 22, 2021
44
40
Colorado
The combination that I just installed is a Maxxis Dissector 2.4” in front and Maxxis Aggressor 2.3”, (fast rolling) in the rear. I think it works perfectly! I recently put them to the test on some very Rocky trails, here in Colorado. Some pretty substantial rock scuffs, but they held up. I like that the tires are relatively light, which translates into more miles per charge. Kind of important on my M10 Rise.
 

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