Just like your typical mountain bike, when it comes to fat bikes tubeless tires have a lot to offer. Eliminating (or close to) flats is a pretty big deal, especially given the fact that your typical fat bike inner tube will usually run at least double the cost of a standard tube. In many circumstances, dropping the tubes will also result in a significant weight loss – sometimes more than a pound. In our experience, the lack of an inner tube has also resulted in a better handling that will conform to the trail for improved traction.
In spite of all the advantages, going tubeless on a fattie still presents some challenges. Getting a large volume of sealant into a floppy tire and still being able to get that tire to seat on the rim can be tricky. That’s why products like Bontrager’s new fat bike TLR system get us excited. There are a number of tubeless systems available already from HED, Foundry/45NRTH, Turnagain, Sun Ringle, and more, but options are always good for the consumer. And while there are more than a few rims available, the choices for true tubeless fat bike tires are still fairly limited.
Like a lot of the big brands, Trek and Bontrager aren’t putting forth a huge product line for fat bikes, but what they do have looks promising. Get the details on the new Bontrager Jackalope wheels and Hodag fat bike tires next…
We’ve heard of the mythical creature known as the Jackalope (a jack rabbit with antelope or deer antlers), but weren’t quite sure why the name was chosen for Bontrager’s wheels until we looked it up. According to folk lore one of the ways you can catch a Jackalope is by leaving out a bottle of whiskey. Add that to the fact that they supposedly only breed during winter electrical storms, and we’re thinking the name is spot on.
As Bontrager’s first fat bike wheelset, the company is liking testing the waters with a single model that features an 80mm wide (75mm internal) 6061 aluminum rim. The welded design features a stiffening double wall channel that is offset to one side of the rim. The idea being that the design allows for more even spoke tension with less dish without giving up stiffness at the rim. Each wheel uses 32 double butted 14/15 spokes that are threaded to the rim using locking nipples.
At first we were curious what the OSB and offset valve hole would mean for running tubes, but we were able to mount up a tire with a tube without issue. Most of us will be running these tubeless, but the ability to throw a tube in during an emergency is a necessary feature.