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Thread: Need help picking rear tires for 350x

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
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    Lewiston, N.Y.
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    Need help picking rear tires for 350x

    Not really up on my brands of tires these days so any help is appreciated. I run mostly in rocky / hilly terrain with the occasional mud pit. I would think I would need a good mud tire with ability to slide. ..if they make such a tire?

    Any help is greatly appreciated!

  2. #2
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    One option is to do a Google search for 22x10x9 tires . . You want at least a 4 ply tire for rocks and if you ride over sharp stuff, and 6 ply is better, but the 6 plies are a bit heavy which in your case doesn't matter much.

    This tire is good for mud and rocks and plowin the field but it won't slide as well as many others.

    http://www.bikebandit.com/tires-tube...p-fox-atv-tire

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  3. #3
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    Thanks Barnett! That looks like a super tire but is there that perhaps might slide more so than that

  4. #4
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    Take a look at the Kenda Klaw tire. In my opinion, its a great multi-surface tire. They are Bi-directional in that one way for hard pack and the other for soft pack.

  5. #5
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    the Klaw is 22x11x9


  6. #6
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    Quote Originally Posted by userj8670 View Post
    Thanks Barnett! That looks like a super tire but is there that perhaps might slide more so than that
    The prob you have is your tire size and intended use . . The Klaw Flyingw mentioned is a good tire and will slide more than the one I posted but is no match for the one I posted in the mud, so you kinda need to get the tire type that will be best for the way you use the mike the most.

    Wha tire did you have before?

    Did you like it?

  7. #7
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    The Klaw is also 1" wider than your stockers and someone else that has run the wide Klaw will have to give you their opinion on running that width on your rims.

  8. #8
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    I put the Klaws on two SXs and didn't really notice the added width. I liked those tires. They even didn't do half bad in loose sand but performed very well in all other terrains.

  9. #9
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    do not buy 22's they will dog the bike down due to the extra weight..you wont even power slide with any of those tires. buy 20" rears, mud lights may work for you but they are still heavy and have a lot of side bite. a flat holeshot style tire will perform well.

    I also like how everyone says you need a 4ply or heavier tire...from a guy how had road 27 years in rocks I have never put a hole or slash in tire...if your riding in the woods with tree stumps you will put holes in tires.

  10. #10
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    Duro or Wanda knobbies are what I run in 20" or 22" there so light and reliable it doesn't matter. When you put a hole in one $50 and your rolling again.
    "Roll on 3"

    RIP Ol' Deuce

    "Long Live the ATC"
    Building: ATCr125x
    Riding: ATC200sx
    "I am not a mechanic, mechanics get paid for this. I do it because I enjoy it."

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by barnett468 View Post
    The prob you have is your tire size and intended use . . The Klaw Flyingw mentioned is a good tire and will slide more than the one I posted but is no match for the one I posted in the mud, so you kinda need to get the tire type that will be best for the way you use the mike the most.

    Wha tire did you have before?

    Did you like it?
    I have old school original wooly boogers on my bike. They seemed to do well but don't slide very well - lots of side bite

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by barnett468 View Post
    .
    the Klaw is 22x11x9

    Will these go thru mud?

  13. #13
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    Your bike came with 22 inch tires and for your app, 22s ain't gonna "bog it down" . . its not like you are trying to race a "TECATE...The Most Powerful 3 Wheeler In The Universe", plus it has a 350 cc engine, so its not like your putting them on a 250R or an ATC90 . . The diameter, the more traction it will have in mud if all else remains the same . . If you put 24 inch tires on it, it will go thru the mud better than 20's or 22's if it is the same tread etc . . The larger diameter will make your gearing "taller" so you spend $18.00 on a one tooth countershaft sprocket to compensate for the extra tall tire.

    As far as what ply you "need", you don't really "need" or 6 ply tires but for sharp edged rock, they are less likely to get a hole so in that regard they are just a little more added insurance against it . . Some people ride for years and never get holes and others aren't so lucky but if you get a hole, you can just put a tube it.

    For sliding, a 4 ply tire is better than a 2 ply if all else is the same and a low profile tire will slide better than a high profile one if all else remains the same and a smaller diameter tire will slide better than a larger one if all else remains the same.

    As I mentioned, you are really wanting one type of tire that works well in two extremely different environments and there simply isn't anything.

    Yes both the Klaws and the Wandas will "go thru mud" so to speak, but again, the ones I posted will go thru it better in most cases, and if its a matter of going as far as possible thru a mud pit, the ones I posted are much better but they are the worst for sliding.

    Below is a tire that is likely better for sliding than the others previously mentioned but it won't be quite as good in the mud, especially since it is a 20" tire . . it is also a 4 ply which is fine.

    https://www.rockymountainatvmc.com/p...adial-ATV-Tire




    the tire below comes in 20x10x9 and 21x11x9 6 ply and should slide decent but be a little better in mud than the one above.

    https://www.rockymountainatvmc.com/p...-GNCC-ATV-Tire




    heres a wanda knobby P357 X tread . . this one is a 6 ply . . it has tall knobs and the ones on the outside have a sharp edge . . these features make it a little more diccifult to slide but if jmoozy says they slide easy, then they slide easy but the two above should be easier to slide for a less aggressive or less experienced rider.




    heres a wooly booger for comparison


  14. #14
    barnett468 is offline FACT ! I have no edit button Arm chair racerThe day begins with 3WW
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    POST CORRECTION BECAUSE I HAVE NO EDT BUTTON

    "The diameter, the more traction it will have in mud if all else remains the same."

    should read

    "The larger the diameter the more traction it will have in mud if all else remains the same."


    "...its not like your putting them on a 250R or an ATC90."

    should read

    "... its not like your putting them on a low power bike like a 250R or an ATC90."

  15. #15
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    A heavy 6ply tire in 22" will feel a lot different then a light 2ply tire in 22"...there is a lot of extra weight there. a 350X is already tippy and tall, lower the rear and let it preform like it should. 22's do not belong on any sport ATC or ATV, 20's.

    An ITP mud lite will prod give you the best of both world.

    I owned a set of wanda tires on my wifes raptor 250...they instantly felt different on the bike going from 2ply to 4ply. However the tires are build decent and all we ride in coal rocks. It climbed hills the same as guy running style paddle tires.

    Normally if your gonna go with a heavier tire in the year you may need to drop down a tooth in the front to give the back its snappy torque back.

    For mud you want a tire that self cleans. The tighter the knobs the worse it wont clean. I vote mud lights...I run them on my banshee in everything. But I felt the weight difference on them also so went town a tooth in the front to make up for it.

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