Reynolds Goes Alloy: Are These the Best Value MTB Wheels for 2026?
My Albert radial finally gave up at mile 1,247. Not a puncture—the casing delaminated where the sidewall meets the tread. The $108 experiment was over. Meanwhile, the guy I ride with just hit 2,000 miles on his traditional Assegai. Half the price, twice the lifespan.
But here’s what keeps me reaching for my credit card: those 1,247 miles included sections I’d walked for three years. Wet granite slabs that became rideable. Root gardens that turned from survival to flow. The Albert and Magic Mary radials aren’t just expensive tires—they’re capability unlockers. If that capability is worth $200+ for a pair depends on your trails, your wallet, and your willingness to become a tire pressure scientist.
| Aspect | Albert Radial | Magic Mary Radial | Traditional Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Street Price | $95-105 | $100-108 | Maxxis Assegai ($74) |
| Actual Weight (29x2.5”) | 1,148g Trail / 1,368g Gravity | 1,180g Trail / 1,406g Gravity | 15% lighter |
| Best Conditions | Dry/mixed, hardpack, rock | Wet/loose, mud, loam | Albert |
| Pressure Sweet Spot (170lb rider) | 25-27 PSI front | 24-26 PSI front | Mary (more forgiving) |
| Lifespan (my experience) | 1,200-1,500 miles | 1,000-1,300 miles | Traditional (2x longer) |
| Grip vs Traditional | +25% dry, +35% wet rocks | +30% all conditions | Mary |
| Rolling Resistance | +3.8W vs traditional | +4.3W vs traditional | Albert |
Get the Albert if: You ride dry to mixed conditions, prioritize speed over ultimate grip, want one tire for year-round use.
Get the Magic Mary if: You ride wet/muddy terrain regularly, value maximum grip over efficiency, don’t mind swapping tires seasonally.
Skip both if: You’re budget-conscious, ride mellow trails, prefer set-and-forget simplicity, or need proven 2,000+ mile durability.
What are Schwalbe radial tires? Schwalbe radial tires use perpendicular casing threads (like car tires) instead of diagonal bias construction. This creates a larger, more flexible contact patch that delivers up to 30% more grip on technical terrain while requiring specific pressure tuning for optimal performance.
I bought these with my own money after the radial vs traditional comparison left questions. Not “does radial work?” But which radial model actually delivers? And what’s the real ownership cost? (For e-bike considerations, see our best eMTB motors guide.)
The Albert’s tightly-spaced knobs create a nearly continuous contact patch on hardpack. First descent on familiar trail, I carried 3-4 mph more speed through flat corners without trying. The tire hooks up predictably—no sudden break-away, just progressive drift you can control with body position.
On granite slabs—Squamish’s signature torture test—the Albert sticks where traditional tires sketch. That claimed 30% larger contact patch? I believe it. Steep roll-downs that required perfect weight distribution became point-and-shoot affairs. The confidence boost alone justified the purchase.
Climbing traction surprised me most. The Albert’s lower knob height (compared to Magic Mary) means less squirm under power. Technical climbs where the Mary would spin, the Albert would grip and go. On measured 18% grades, I maintained cadence 15-20 RPM higher than with my Assegai.
Mud. Deep mud specifically. The tight knob spacing that works brilliantly on hardpack becomes a liability when things get greasy. The tread packs up, turning your $100 tire into a semi-slick. Three rides in November rain convinced me: Albert is a fair-weather friend.
Cornering support requires attention. Run the Albert at traditional pressures (22-23 PSI for my weight) and it folds unpredictably in berms. The sidewall collapses, shifting your contact patch mid-corner. Scary at speed. Solution: run 26-27 PSI front, 28-29 rear. But at those pressures, you sacrifice the compliance that makes radials special.
For 170-pound rider, 30mm internal width rims:
| Conditions | Front PSI | Rear PSI | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bike Park | 28 | 30 | Maximum support for jumps/berms |
| Dry/Rocky | 26 | 28 | Best all-round performance |
| Mixed Trail | 25 | 27 | Good grip/support balance |
| Wet Roots | 24 | 26 | Minimum for cornering stability |
| Below 24/26 | - | - | Squirmy, unpredictable, rim strikes |
Add 1 PSI per 15 pounds of rider weight. Subtract 1 PSI for 35mm+ internal width rims.
Wet roots might as well be velcro. The Mary’s widely-spaced knobs penetrate surface slime and find purchase underneath. Off-camber root traverses that require inch-perfect line choice on traditional tires become casual. The difference isn’t subtle—it’s massive.
In loose-over-hard conditions, the Mary digs deep. Those ball-bearing marbles that wash out your front end? The Mary punches through them. Loose corners where you’d normally squared-off and brake-checked become rail-able arcs. The grip increase over traditional construction feels like cheating.
Mud clearance actually works. Unlike the Albert, the Mary’s open tread sheds mud effectively. Not Shorty-level clearing, but good enough for Pacific Northwest winter. The tire maintains functionality when conditions deteriorate.
Rolling resistance hurts. Lab tests show 4.3W more resistance than traditional casing. In practice? You feel it on every pedal stroke. Long liaisons become grinding sessions. Your riding buddies pull away on climbs. The Mary makes you choose: grip or efficiency. You can’t have both.
Weight adds up. At 1,406g for the Gravity Pro version, you’re pushing porky territory. Combined with the rolling resistance, climbing becomes a mental battle. Every switchback reminds you that you’re hauling an extra half-pound of rotating mass.
Knob tear became an issue at mile 900. The tall side knobs that provide heroic cornering grip also lever against the casing violently. Three knobs partially tore during normal trail riding—not crashes. By mile 1,000, the tire looked haggard despite plenty of tread depth remaining.
For 170-pound rider, 30mm internal width rims:
| Conditions | Front PSI | Rear PSI | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bike Park | 27 | 29 | Prevents knob fold |
| Wet/Muddy | 24 | 26 | Maximum grip mode |
| Mixed Trail | 25 | 27 | Balanced performance |
| Dry/Hardpack | 26 | 28 | Reduces rolling resistance |
| Below 23/25 | - | - | Excessive squirm, knob fold |
The Mary tolerates a wider pressure range than the Albert but performs best in a narrow window.
Albert Radial (1,247 miles):
Magic Mary Radial (1,086 miles):
For comparison, my last Maxxis Assegai lasted 2,100 miles before replacement. The radials wear faster, damage easier, and cost more. The math only works if you value grip above everything.
Both radials drink sealant like it’s free. The flexible casing works the sealant constantly, accelerating evaporation. Monthly top-ups required (60ml minimum) versus quarterly with traditional tires. Annual sealant cost: ~$40 extra.
Radials mount differently. The bead seats gradually, not with the usual “pop.” First installation took 65 PSI to fully seat—my floor pump maxed at 60. Borrowed a compressor. Second installation went smoother but still required 50+ PSI. Understanding the fundamental differences between radial and traditional construction helps explain why mounting feels so different.
Pro tip: Liberal soapy water on the bead. Let it sit 5 minutes. Inflate slowly to 30 PSI, check bead seating, then blast to 50+ if needed.
Both tires are directional but Schwalbe’s markings suck. The arrow is molded into black rubber on black rubber. In shop lighting, it’s invisible. I mounted my first Albert backward. The handling was so weird I thought I had a defective tire. Flipped it around—problem solved.
Check Schwalbe’s website for clear rotation diagrams. Don’t trust the sidewall markings.
Ran CushCore Pro with both tires for bike park days. Completely defeats the purpose. The insert negates the casing compliance that makes radials special. You get the weight and rolling resistance penalties without the grip benefit. Save your money—run traditional tires with inserts.
Most riders should stick with traditional rear tires. The radial advantages diminish where driving traction and braking matter most. But if going full radial:
Ultra Soft: Grip levels that redefine possible. Wears fast (30% quicker than Soft). Winter/wet season only.
Soft: Still grippier than most competitors’ softest compounds. Better wear, acceptable in all conditions. Most riders should choose Soft.
Industry sources suggest manufacturing complexity is the holdup. Radial construction requires different machinery than traditional. Schwalbe invested millions in new production lines. Competitors are waiting to see if demand justifies the investment.
When competition arrives, expect:
If you can wait until late 2026, you’ll have options and better prices.
Front: Magic Mary Radial Ultra Soft (wet season) Rear: Maxxis DHR II 3C MaxxTerra (year-round)
The Mary’s wet-weather dominance justifies its price up front. The traditional DHR II provides predictable braking and costs half as much. Best of both worlds: radical grip where it matters, proven reliability where it counts.
Front: Maxxis Assegai 3C MaxxGrip Rear: DHR II 3C MaxxTerra
Dry conditions don’t justify radial premiums. The Assegai’s predictable cornering beats the Albert when moisture isn’t a factor. Plus, I can afford to replace both tires for the price of one radial.
Albert Radial:
Traditional Assegai:
Radials cost 3x more per mile. For 2,000 miles/year, that’s $140 extra annually. The grip better be transformative.
If radials let you clean one section per ride you’d normally walk, and you ride 100 times yearly, that’s 100 more successful attempts. What’s that worth? For me, plenty. For riders who already clean everything? Nothing.
Schwalbe’s radial tires deliver on their core promise: more grip from the radial casing design. The Albert and Magic Mary radials stick where traditional tires don’t. On the right trails, in the right conditions, they’re capability multipliers worth every penny.
But they’re not universal upgrades. Higher pressures, shorter lifespans, mounting hassles, and premium pricing limit their appeal. Most riders on most trails won’t notice $200 worth of improvement. The sweet spot is narrow: technical terrain, wet conditions, riders who adjust pressure religiously, and wallets that won’t flinch at 10 cents per mile.
My advice? Buy one radial front tire for wet season. Run it October through March when trails are spicy. Learn its pressure quirks. Feel the grip advantage. Then decide if the summer dry deserves radial investment or if traditional rubber makes more sense.
The revolution already happened—tubeless changed everything. Radials are evolution: meaningful for some, irrelevant for others, overpriced for most. But for those specific situations where maximum grip unlocks new possibilities? They’re the best $108 you’ll spend.
Just keep a traditional spare in the garage. You’ll need it sooner than Schwalbe admits.
Tested on Norco Range C2, primarily Squamish and North Shore trails, August 2025 - February 2026. Weights verified on Park Tool DS-1. Pressures measured with Topeak D2X digital gauge. 2,333 total radial test miles.