
lovinthehd
Audioholic Jedi
Big and meaty is a good thing for a big guy. I got the weird backpack thing with my Maxxis tire, too, and all I could think of was I'd rather have a better price@lovinthehd
Should get my bike back from the shop tomorrow.
I went back with the WTB Ranger 3.0" (tough version) on the rear, partly at the rec of the shop guy and partly due to cost (of course the LBS prices are a bit more than online parts pricing). However, I did purchase a Maxxis Ikon 2.8" online as a spare, so I will try that out eventually (it also came with a free Maxxis draw-string backpack, score!).
I'm moving from a 160mm rotor to 180mm on the rear, and new brake pads.
And, completely rebuilding my rear wheel with stronger spokes. I broke a couple of spokes, and this is the 2nd time I've done that.
The big difference this time is that the owner handed me off to a guy that has more experience with the larger tires, but he is also a much larger guy like I am. So, he understands the unique challenges and stresses that a big heavy rider puts on an XXL bike. He took a good look at my broken spokes and made that rebuild suggestion, even before I told him this is my 2nd trip with broken spokes. But, that is also ~800 miles on this bike.
I've mostly been using 180/185 fronts and 160/165 rears (depending on bike/brakeset) for quite a while, altho the Hightower came with 180 front and rear....almost shrunk the rear but I'm getting used to having more brake on the rear I think so think I'll leave it alone. Long ago I tried dual 200s but that was way overkill for me. You use metallic or organic pads? I've used metallic mostly since going disc, they seem to work better overall in all conditions.
I'm getting my old Heckler (or I guess Beckler since I converted it to 650B/27.5") ready as a spare bike and just yesterday ordered spokes to rebuild its rear wheel. I had originally used triple butted Sapim Lasers, but had several break due to a branch in the spokes, and replaced a couple years ago with what was available in a shop on a road trip (not even black like the rest of them, and were not butted at all
Beefy wheels and tire sidewalls can be a good thing, especially for big guys (IIRC one reason Santa Cruz did the 120tpi up front but the stiffer 60tpi in rear on the Rekons, to provide a bit more stability for the rear).