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Dalton Highway
Hi,
I`m planning to ride from Anchorage to Prudhoe Bay this June. Can anyone give me an idea of likely weather and road conditions? Cheers |
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Dalton Highway
Great ride a group of us from New Zealand rode up june 2008 worth putting good tyres so road and senery can really be enjoyed. We ran TKC-80s on Vstroms and had no problems. Enjoy eand ride safe.Wizza:funmeteryes:
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I expect it'll be lovely - I rode up there in Sep 06, did Fairbanks to Prudhoe no worries in a day - but it was dry. They told me Sep was too late, but it was beautiful. Might be difficult in wet tho (like when I did the Dempster to Inuvik)
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Tyres - Dalton Highway
Thanks for the feedback! Wizza mentioned TCK 80`s. Regardless of the conditions would these be the best bet for the trip?
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Without a shadow of a doubt, dry or wet! They are very tough (though nothing's indestructible - as I found out at the first HUMM in 2007 see "2007 report"!! But I got all the way from Prudhoe to Ruta 40 in S Argentina on them without a single puncture - but then I seemed to get a few!! And for some reason, my punctures have always been rear, I'm not sure if this is a coincidence.
On a tubeless tyre, you want to run LOW pressures on the dirt - I'd say no more than 20psi rear and 15psi front. You won't feel every little stone you ride over, the bike will grip a lot better, and you're far less likely to get puncture or damage your tyre. The problem with low pressures on a tubed tyre is pinching, but I think with tubeless, its almost the lower the better, providing you don't damage the rim, knock the tyre off the rim, or overheat the tyre (realisticallty that would be on road unless you're an incredible rider!). It may even be better to go lower than I've said, but I've not tried lower than above figures. Good luck - it is amazing! As is the Dempster also - but in the words of Bon Jovi, "Slippery When Wet"! |
Lots of variables being ignored here. You don't say what bike, so it's hard to know whether you'll be riding tubes or tubeless. If the former, you need rimlocks to run pressures that low. And many people find TKC to offer good all-round service but grievously short lifespans at elevated prices. This is worth considering, since it might require advance planning or you'll wind up without usable tread somewhere awkward. Etc. Etc. Etc.
Hope that helps. Mark |
Tyres - Dalton Highway
Thanks! I`m riding a BMW 650 Dakar and was planning on using Metzler Tourances, but now I`m not too sure!!??
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I wouldn't worry too much about it ,people ride Gold Wings and full dress Harleys up the Dalton .
You can buy tyres in Alaska if you think you need to change due to weather . |
if you want a cheap $35.00 a night dorm room in fairbanks during the summer school break check with University of Alaska in Fairbanks tell them you belong to Adv-rider and if there's room it includes free wi-fi, laundry, shower, clean room and beds. |
Tyres
Thanks Kestrel! Very helpful stuff!
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Don't know where you're starting from, but if Anchorage I would equip youself with TKC80's. You're prepared for the worst, and they're about as tough a dual-purpose tyre as you'll get.
Regarding life, the knobs do wear quickly inititally, but I've got as many as 6000 miles from a rear, twice that from the front! This pic was taken in Santiago, and I had the tyre fitted in Los Angeles - about 12000 miles!! http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2373/...e1ce6edeb2.jpg Admittedly the knobs weren't much use at this point, but it was lovely and smooth on the blacktop!:clap: And at UK prices I don't think they're bad on £ per mile - maybe 2/3 the price of road tyres and 2/3 the life? |
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Couple this with far north weather variability where it can be sunny and dry to wet and cold to snow in almost any month. Deadhorse is almost 70 degrees latitude. In general, if it is dry-ish, almost any 90-10 tire like a Tourance will be perfectly fine. If the conditions are mixed, you could toss a knobby front tire like a TKC on the front, which makes a big difference. If it is full on wet, then you would be happier with both a front and rear knobby. In past years there has been occasional shortages of knobby tires or high prices so people have been pre ordering or pre shipping or carrying them along. There is more than one place carrying tires these days. Me, I'd buy a TKC front tire online in the US and then just strap it on for the ride up and throw it on in Fairbanks and then leave it on as you can get ~10,000 km on a front as the previous poster mentioned. To put it in perspective though, the Dalton is probably one of the best maintained gravel roads in the world. There is a multi billion dollar oil field operation at the end of the road and this is the only road link so as you can imagine they are interested in keeping it pretty well looked after. But the northern climate still makes it a challenge. What you do depends a lot on your experience and how comfortable you feel riding on gravel roads. The ultimate factor is the weather conditions, when they are good you will wonder what all the fuss was about. When they are bad you will appreciate your preparation and practice. |
I was up last year, mid July on a '75 BMW R60. It was very good weather (only a little rain over Atigun) but met others who had an entirely miserable experience just a week earlier. You can check historical weather at Deadhorse and elsewhere at History : Weather Underground The only truly ugly parts were road construction and where they had just dumped carbonate slime to cut down on the dust. Also, the last 60 miles or so into Deadhorse were not too enjoyable as the road seems to have a much larger diameter gravel (more like cobbles in places) which made it a way more unstable for me. Probably just a matter of local source. Deadhorse was cold... 34F with a 35 MPH wind but other than that the rest of the way was quite comfortable. I lucked out with the mosquitoes (there virtually were none) but talking to a ranger at the Visitors Center, discovered that he had experienced the worst in his 26 years up there just two weeks earlier. If I remember, he said they ran a (brief) experiment and were counting up to 96 mosquito landings per square inch. Ugh.
I carried some cheap narrow knobbies (a King and a Cheng Shen) up with me and switched into them just south of the start of the Dalton. I was very glad I did. They worked great. Huge difference. I just donated them to a roadside charity flea market in Fairbanks but they showed almost no wear. Anyway... enjoy your trip. I'd go back in a heartbeat, but heading off in another direction this coming year. |
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