I have studded snow tires and used to use them to commute to work here in 
New York City on my vintage 80s mountain bike. I LOVE THEM. It's so fun to 
just go anywhere with confidence.

Check out a ride I went on here on my YouTube channel:
https://youtu.be/B0xyW6dUSow

For trail riding in Maine though, I would buy a Surly Wednesday in a 
heartbeat. Have you seen the latest color for the Ice Cream Truck? It's an 
amazing pale green.

m


On Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 7:13:22 PM UTC-5 Ian A wrote:

> My experience is similar to Steven's. I'm in Alberta, Canada and am 
> running Ice Spikers Pro (folding bead) 26"x2.1". 
>
> I would add to Steven's comment that riding on a snow trail which has been 
> walked on can be hard going; bouncing around and finding it hard to pick a 
> line, which is essential in snow as momentum is everything.. Those areas 
> are where the fat bikes sail along. Deep snow is basically not ridable at 
> all.
>
> IanA Alberta Canada
>
> On Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 3:19:56 PM UTC-7 Steven Sweedler wrote:
>
>> David, I rode 26” x 2.2 tires with aggressive studs for many years in New 
>> Hampshire. The riding was a struggle unless very well packed or after a 
>> thaw  and then another hard freeze.  When conditions are good, its a lot of 
>> fun. Steve
>>
>> On Thu, Jan 7, 2021 at 9:49 AM David Wadstrup <davidw...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I recently moved to Maine, and would really like to keep riding trails 
>>> even in these snowy, icy conditions.  So, I'm hoping for some advice.  I 
>>> initially thought a fat bike might be in order, but after diving deep into 
>>> Surly Wednesday research, I've decided that it's just not for me -- I'd 
>>> much rather ski, or even snowshoe, if there's a significant amount of new, 
>>> unpacked snow.  What I'm mostly interested in riding is our local, hilly, 
>>> graveled trails that are fully snow covered and that see a lot of foot 
>>> traffic even in winter(walkers, skiers, snowshoers, fat bike riders, even 
>>> some snowmobiles.)  So here are my questions to those of you who have 
>>> experience with winter trail riding...
>>>
>>> 1) I can fit a 2.6 tire on my Susie.  Is this fat enough to ride snowy, 
>>> icy, chewed up, packed trails?  I'm sure it's possible, but is fun?  I know 
>>> a fat bike would give better float, and roll over everything more, but 
>>> would my plus sized 29er tires handle it ok? Would it float enough and roll 
>>> over enough to make investing in a set of VERY expensive 2.6 studded tires 
>>> be worth it?  Or will it just be mostly a slog?
>>>
>>> 2) Regarding studded tires...I've used 40mm wide Nokian Hakkas for 
>>> wintertime commuting in the city, but am going to need something wider, 
>>> something designed for trail riding.  The two best options as far as I can 
>>> see are the Schwalbe Ice Spiker Pros and the 45North Wrathchilds.  The 
>>> Schwalbes only come in a 2.25" width, the 45Norths in a 2.6".  Obviously, 
>>> wider sounds better, but there are some mitigating factors... 
>>>
>>> On the one hand, the 45Norths are considerably more expensive than the 
>>> Schwalbes.  They have less studs, and they seem to be prone to exceptional 
>>> stud loss and have garnered a number of negative reviews.  There are two 
>>> versions of them, though.  One, a 60TPi version with "regular" sized studs; 
>>> two, a 120TPI version with "XL" sized studs.  They are similar in price.  
>>> From what I can gather, the 120/XL version seems to be the version that 
>>> sees the most stud loss and is the one almost all of the online negative 
>>> reviews reference.  Does anyone have any experience with either of these 
>>> versions?  Is my assumption that the 60TPI loses less studs correct?  What 
>>> do you think of this tire generally?  Is it wide enough for packed, snowy 
>>> trails?
>>>
>>> On the other hand, the Schwalbe Ice Spikers are much less expensive.  
>>> They have considerably more studs.  Their current version seem to have far 
>>> few negative reviews.  But they are .35" narrower -- that's 9mm! I would 
>>> think that this 9mm would make a huge difference in performance in the 
>>> conditions I'm looking to use them in, but maybe it won't?  Maybe 2.25 and 
>>> 2.6 tires will be comparable? Maybe the greater stud count and better 
>>> reviews and lower cost outweighs the extra width of the 45North?  What  do 
>>> you think?
>>>
>>> Thanks for whatever advice you might have.  Oh, and in case it makes a 
>>> difference --  I'll be running them with tubes and will not need to ride 
>>> these tires on pavement before getting to the trailhead(it's right outside 
>>> my door, practically!)
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>>
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>>> .
>>>
>> -- 
>> Steven Sweedler
>> Plymouth, New Hampshire
>>
>

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