What is radial tire about
@koulee - welcome to the forum. Good question for a new member. Here's the short version:
Radial vs Bias-ply (Standard) Construction Most MTB tyres are
bias-ply (sometimes called "cross-ply") - the cord layers inside the casing run diagonally at roughly 45° angles, crossing each other. This makes a fairly stiff, robust structure but the sidewall and tread area flex together as one unit.
A
radial tyre has its cords running
radially - straight across from bead to bead, perpendicular to the direction of travel. The sidewall and tread deform more independently.
In practice, on an eMTB, what does that mean? •
More compliant sidewall - the tyre conforms to the trail surface better, improving grip on rocks and roots
•
Larger contact patch - the tread sits flatter on the ground at a given pressure
•
Lower pressures required - radials work best run noticeably softer than an equivalent bias-ply.
@DaveGo's post on the Yeti LTe thread is a good example: 90kg rider, 1.6 bar front, calls it "the best tyre ever"
•
Heavier bike penalty - at eMTB weights, some riders find radials can feel squirmy or need careful pressure calibration.
@Suns_PSD's post notes the Albert worked well on a 13kg trail bike at 1.5 bar but struggled to find the sweet spot on the e-bike
•
Different feel hitting obstacles - more absorbent, less "ping" off rocks.
@timo2824's post describes it well: "dead feel hitting roots/rocks - absorbs impact instead of deflecting"
Schwalbe are the main brand pushing radial MTB tyres - Magic Mary, Gravity Albert, Tacky Chan, Shredda all come in radial casings. Worth a look at the dedicated thread here:
https://www.emtbforums.com/threads/39744/