A sublime ride and low rolling resistance make it a fantastic race option if you avo♏id🅺 anything sharp
Pros
+
Sublime ride quality on and off road
+
Fast, very fast
+
Classic looks
Cons
-
Fragile
-
Can feel squirmy at lower pressures
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Line up at any cyclo-cross race, or tune in to watch one, and the start line is focused on one thing and one thing only: tyres. While road tech has a swirling nebula of advancements, cyꦑclo-cross, while it has for sure seen its fair share of tech leaps, is really a game of tyres; they make more difference to performance than any other component. Cotton-cased tyres are the name of the game, and in the pro ranks outside of North America, you’ll only really see riders using tyres from FMB, Dugast, and Challenge. The latter supplies tubular race tyres to current world champion Tom Pidcock, and clincher tyres to the rest of us and is probably the biggest supplier of cotton tyres to the general public.
The 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:cyclo-cross vs gravel debate has been well and truly laid to rest, but as a brand renowned for making tyres for fast off-road use, it isn’t a huge surprise to see Challenge expanding its range of gravel tyres, originally confined to the Gravel Grinder, a plumped out version of its Chicane dry weather cyclo-cross offering. The range has expanded, and I’ve been putting some miles atop a set of its new 40mm Getaways. Do we need to expand our list of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:best gravel tyres to include them?
The closely spaced central lugs on the Challenge Getaways make for 🐷a fast tyre (Image credit: Will Jones)
Design and aesthetics
Challenge's ‘open tubulars’ (clinchers, to you and I) are constructed differently from a standard vulcanised rubber tyre. A cotton band is sewn into a loop with a bead inserted at the edge, and the actual rubber tread is then glued on afterwards. This is how all fancy race tyres used to be made, and what many modern tan-wall tyres that you find on the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:best gravel bikes try to ape from an aesthetic standpoint, but✅ these are the real deal.
The casing is incredibly pliable at 270 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:threads per inch, and feels as you’d expect for rubber-impregn🍎ated fabric. It’s not quite as supple as the 300TPI of the brand's CX offerings, and is double thickness in the sidewalls, presumably to add a little more puncture protection and support in cornering. If you’ve never purchased a set of Challenge tyres before, getting them out of the box i🍸s a little surprising as they lie absolutely flat like a ribbon, which does make mounting a bit more of a task.
The tread in the case of the Getaways is clearly an option attuned to dryer conditions. The central belt comprises tightly spaced, arrow-shaped knobs that more or less create a solid band before transitioning into much more widely spaced intermediary knobs and ♍larger, very weꦆll-spaced shoulder knobs that are similar in shape to those on the Gravel Grinder, but far less pronounced in height. The knobs themselves aren’t tall either, a couple of millimetres at most, further alluding to the fact these aren’t aimed at carving through so much slop.
From a purely aesthetic standpoint, having proper tan walls looks really quite cool on more or less any bike, 🦂and the branding is classic Euro, the tyre equivalent of a sponsor-soup jersey; a far cry from t🐟he minimalist approach of WTB and the like.
Pജlenty of soapy water was needed to get them to seat (Image credit: Will Jones)
Performance
There’s no getting away from the fact that 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:setting up tubeless tyres is more challenging with cotton casings. First of all the tyre wants to lie flat, meaning teasing the bead on 🥃initially feels like it needs a third arm; you end up with both beads in to start with, and a tyre tread lying absolutely flat, perpendicular to the wheel sidewalls. The Challenge Getaways were relatively difficult to seat on my set of Parcours Alta wheels, requiring plenty of soapy water and coarse language, and with the suggested Challenge Smart Tubeless Sealant they took longer than average to hold their air. Cotton, even rubber impregnated, will take longer to seal than a vulcanised rubber carcass.
If you’ve never ridden hyper-supple tyres, it’s worth trying even if you just throw a leg over one of your mates' bikes forꦍ a bit. The way they eliminate the buzz of bad tarmac as you dart between gravel sections is sublime. Either on or off-road you don’t so much ping off divots and potholes and roots as gently rock through them much like a yacht in slightly choppy waters. It’s a little like the suspension on a Rolls Royce or an old Citroen (guess which one I have experience with).
O🦄n try trails, particularly more sandy ones, they performed extremely well (Image credit: Will Jones)
While these aren’t a tyre for tarmac they do carry their speed well enough on the black stuff, and given most of us will ride at least some road when doing a gravel ride it is worth noting that they don’t hold you back in this regard, and thanks to the construction you also aren't subjected toꦕ the hum from the knobs as you tick along either.
Off the road, they truly are a delight. The low rolling resistance that comes from the high TPI and the fast centre tread, along with the relatively low weight of 440g means they fly along and never feel like they hold you back from a drag perspective. The straight line grip is excellent too, again thanks to a combo of the tread pattern and the larger footprint afforded by the supple carcass. Unlike the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:WTB Byway tyres I've also been recently testing, these can stand being run a little firmer without sacrificing comfort, which is of benefit if you do end up spending more time on the road t🧜han you’d perhaps like.
In the corners, the side knobs🐠 do a decent job, with a progressive letting-go-of-grip that’s predictable - if not the most confidence-inspiring - in high speed, tight cornering; stick a leg out though and you should be fine. Having ridden the Gravel Grinders for years, I do appreciate the get-out-of-jail-free card that the ultra-aggressive shoulder lugs offer in loose terrain, but I’d suggest that the Getaway is a tyre more suited to racing and riding on more open, flowing gravel tracks rather than twisty forest single and double track.
Back onto tyre pressures for a moment finally, as running these too low can result in a more squirmy experience as the sidewalls don’t necessarily have the stiffness to support the cornering forces, and you can sometimes feel them folding under you. If you’re running a modern 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:gravel wheelset this will be less of an issue, but if you are on older rims (I'm talking 19mm internals or so) it’s worth bearing this in mind when you pump them up. An extra 8PSI would be about right as🅷 a starting point I’d say and work from there.
In the mud they were ൩a little slippy, but didn't clog too much (Image credit: Will Jones)
We have been blessed somewhat with an extremely dry summer (sorry to any gardeners reading this), and so mud has been a little harder to come by than usual, though as I live in the north of England it isn't impossible to find. These aren’t mud tyres, but you’ll get thr🀅ough most patches without having to dismount. Again, much more a tyre attuned to hardpack and hotter temperatures.
While the ride quality, speed and grip were all excellent there is inevitably a tradeoff, and that comes when we discuss durability. These tyres do technically have puncture protection, but only under the tread itself, meaning the sidewalls are vulnerable to rocks, thorns, glass etc. My usual test🦩ing ground does contain a few thorny bushes but until running these tyres I’d never had an issue. A tiny pinhole in the sidewall eventually left me needing a pickup to get back home, though this ꧂was a lot to do with the Challenge Smart Sealant, which I will take some time now to cover also, as Challenge suggests you use it so as to protect the tyre.
I strongly suggest you ignore this advice and run whatever your go-to sealant of choice is. The hole that left me stranded was genuinely a pinhole, one that I could only find♋ after remov♈ing and cleaning the tyres following testing. I even dumped a whole emergency bottle of Smart Sealant in, to no avail, by the side of the trail, and in a rather frantic (and slightly low blood sugar) moment, tried glueing some roadside litter over the hole to get me home.
On the flip side, when I refilled the tyre with Squirt sealant and some of its associated little beads, the hole did seal instantly. They aren’t going to fall apart, but it’s a good illustration that they are certainly a more fragile offering than full rubber tyres. If you live in a particularly thorn-rich part of the world, or somewheౠre with sharp flint or slate I’d suggest these aren’t the right option for you.
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Despite a whole emergency tube of sealant...(Image credit: Will Jones)
...this pinprick failed to seal(Image credit: Will Jones)
Value
Depending on where you shop, you’re looking at around £80 per tyre, or £160 to kit out your bike. That is at the top end of the spectrum for a gravel tyre, though not absurdly so. If you have the right conditions to make use of them, the Getaways represent a legitimat꧃e performance advantage over many other options in my opinion, and as such, the price is a little easier to justify.
As a general purpose tyre, I’d suggest they’re too pricey given the lack of durability, but I am inc🅷lined to judge them as the former rather than the latter and suggest that if you are after a general purpose option then you should look to vulcanised rubber models.
Though I've been using them for a lot of differe♔nt kinds of riding I'd say they're more suited to racing than general riding (Image credit: Will Jones)
Verdict
The Challenge Getaway is a race tyre, then, or one for an FKT, or those of you willing to spend a littl♛e more to get an absolutely sublime ride and don’t mind the greater risk of flatting. Not a fit-and-forget, one size fits all option, but fast, plenty grippy in the right scenarios and able to handle stretches of tarmac without issue. Also, they look cool, which has to be worth something, right?
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Testing scorecard and notes
Attributes
Notes
Rating
Design and aesthetics
Good looking, with a well thought out tread pattern for the perceived conditions
9/10
Performance
For speed and ride quality they really are hard to beat. I think some biigger shoulder lugs would make them even better though
9/10
Puncture resistance
The sidewalls are very vulnerable. With the right sealant they do alright, the Challenge sealant failed to seal a pin prick.
5/10
Value
As a race option they aren't outlandish compared to some upgrades. Expensive for general use though.
Will joined the Cyclingnews team as a reviews writer in 2022, having previously written for Cyclist, BikeRadar and Advntr. He’s tried his hand at most cycling disciplines, from the standard mix of road, gravel, and mountain bike, to the more unusual like bi🥀ke polo and tracklocross. He’s made his own bike frames, covered tech news from the biggest races on the planet, and published countless premium galleries thanks to his excellent photographic eye. Also, given he doesn’t ever ride indoors he’s become a real expert on foul-weather riding gear. His collection of bikes is a real smorgasbord, with everything from vintage-style steel tourers through to superlight flat bar hill climb machines.