kmccune said:
This and the mud is what I'm worried about. How well campared to a Maxia IT for example?
I have found them work better than the IT but it really depends on how you ride the sand. I have friends who did not like they way they handled sand. Others who feel the same way I do. That only a dedicated purpose produced mud and sand tire could do better.
If the slimy clay mud is the main mud you ride in maybe a trails tire is not what your after. But then the IT does not do well in that kind of mud. I have run both the IT and Trials.
I feel the IT does well in snows, sand and most muds. Most muds the trials tire works better but not all muds. I love the way trials perform in sand. If you run a trials tire with about 6 to 8 psi they do well in the snow. I prefer the IT in snow. In woods single track the trials out performs the IT hands down. In wet woods, slimy rocks and logs again it is the Trials tire that easily wins out.
I would suggest you get a Dunlop because of the price so you can get a good idea if you will like trials tires. The trials tire will in most situations out last a knobby thus making the price worth it. Then when it wears out you really will not have lost any money should you decide you like knobbies better.
In the winter and early spring I take my trials tires off and run IT's because I ride high speed fire roads and desert. That kind of riding is hard on trials tires.
Update: The UPS man showed up today with my Dunlop 803 Trials tire. Here are my initial observation before I even mount it. The side wall construction is stiffer than either IRC's or Michelin's Trials tire. I think this is a good thing for us dirt bikers using trials tires. Also the knobs are bigger (not taller) than the IRC's or the Michelin's. It looks like a sturdier built tire. Of course as with any tire the real test will be in actual performance on the trails. I have talked to others who have used them and they say they perform like the IRC's or Michelin's. I will see for myself soon.