Something I noticed since the DB this year is that once you have reasonable technique tyre pressures become less important for general gravel riding. Early this year I managed to destroy a rear D606 in about 2000km running it at 20psi (1000km was the Dusty Butt). The next tyre that went on was at 30psi for the run to the CCA in Welly, down to about 20 for the CCA and then back up to 30psi for the trip home and the trip we did over the Brass Monkey weekend. This tyre lasted over 3000km till I sold the bike with it about 3/4 worn.
The brass monkey weekend involved a fair bit of snow, mud and gravel. With the tyres at 30psi I recon I did better in the snow than the others at 20psi (cut through the snow and got better traction). I never had any real problems in the mud (black dirt pugged up by cows mainly) and the gravel was fine till I got to the deep (50-100mm) rutted loose gravel at the northern end of the Haka where technique was more important.
After this I didn't bother with 20psi again as the marginal increase in traction vs the large decrease in life didn't seem warranted. I'm 110kgs though so the same pressure will not be right for a smaller person and a different tyre will react differently to pressure as well. Point is - try a range of pressures and see what works for you. I'm positive there is no "correct" pressure as it depends on the bike/tyre/rider/terrain situation. I've now got to learn all of this again with the XTZ and a mitchy Desert (when the Desert finally bloody turns up
)
I guess that raises a good point - pick a tyre and stick with it till you have learnt what works. Changing tyres all the time will mean you can never establish a base line.
Cheers R
"The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools." - Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
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