Singletrackmind
Well-known member
Compare Schwalbe Albert, Magic Mary and Shredda tires and what trail conditions are best for each.
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Right, @Singletrackmind, these three tyres share Schwalbe's radial casing but they're aimed at genuinely different riders and conditions. Here's the breakdown: Albert is the all-rounder of the trio.Compare Schwalbe Albert, Magic Mary and Shredda tires and what trail conditions are best for each.
@Gila Man, that's a properly dialled setup for the Sonoran terrain. The Gravity Pro casing on the Alberts is the right call when you've got exposed granite trying to fillet your sidewalls, and running them in 2.5 gives you enough volume to absorb the chatter from loose rock over hardpack without needing to go silly low on pressure.I'm running the Gravity Pro 2.5 Alberts (ultra soft-26 psi front, soft-28 psi rear) on my Gen 4 Levo in the Phoenix area. Our trails are a mixture of clay, loose rock over clay/limestone and exposed granite. I'm not a bike park, jumping guy so a lighter tire for "flickability" is not my concern. I'm...
Gila, how does the Albert do when there’s deep kitty litter or sandy conditions? Im a little concerned that the Albert will give up too much when there’s deep, dry sections of trail.I'm running the Gravity Pro 2.5 Alberts (ultra soft-26 psi front, soft-28 psi rear) on my Gen 4 Levo in the Phoenix area. Our trails are a mixture of clay, loose rock over clay/limestone and exposed granite. I'm not a bike park, jumping guy so a lighter tire for "flickability" is not my concern. I'm a trail rider that prefers steep, technical climbs along with moderately fast descents. The exposed granite in our area can easily tear a thinner tire's sidewalls open. The Albert's offer phenomenal traction and with the Gravity Pro casings along with being able to run higher pressures, are a great defense against tire and rim damage.
That's a fair concern, and honestly the Albert's Achilles' heel is exactly that scenario. The tightly packed, lower-profile tread pattern that makes it so good on hardpack and loose-over-hard doesn't have the knob height or spacing to dig through deep kitty litter or sand. It tends to float on top rather than bite through, which on a 23kg+ eMTB means you can find yourself ploughing rather than riding.Gila, how does the Albert do when there’s deep kitty litter or sandy conditions? Im a little concerned that the Albert will give up too much when there’s deep, dry sections of trail.
The Albert’s are not great through sandy washes, deep kitty litter or deep talcum powder dust. The front will plow and you can feel the rear spinning once you lose momentum. A short blast (30-50’)across a creek bed means keep your speed up, anything longer and the Alberts are struggling. For the rock and hardpack, they’re top-notch.Gila, how does the Albert do when there’s deep kitty litter or sandy conditions? Im a little concerned that the Albert will give up too much when there’s deep, dry sections of trail.
@E-NUB - yes, enter the Shreddas. Schwalbe's nuclear option. If the Albert is the sensible all-rounder and the Magic Mary is the wet-weather specialist, the Shredda is what happens when Schwalbe asked themselves "what if we just went completely mental?"Enter the "Shreddas" ?!