I had them pumped to the minimum recommended of 40psi and they felt hard.
The single track I rode was a full mix from totally dry, damp, and mud/water puddles. My first test was getting out of the saddle on a SS with such a lightly treaded tire and they were actually pretty decent. Unless it was 100% mud the tires locked right up and grabbed trail. I was surprised. On straight sections the tires rolled just as well as expected. I did have the rear tire mounted in reverse to maximize the grip.
The biggest negative I found was any kind of cornering. The tread is just not there to grab and hold at all. With that said, I didn't expect these tires to corner well and I doubt that is the main goal of this design. One just needs to remember what tires are underneath and ride accordingly. Maybe less tire pressure would help, but I doubt it would change significantly.
Thanks for your thoughts. I'd agree that they are tires that serve a purpose - I'd likely replace my old SB8s with them for summer/spring riding just due to such a low price point.
I think I had mine at 32ish on the front which I think helped the cornering a bit but I am also pretty heavy (and perhaps not as fast) so I don't have too many slide outs in general. Only ones this year were on the 36er in heavy pine straw. Good idea re backwards mounting the rear.
You wouldn't think they'd be very good with such a shallow tread but my experience mimicked yours. Very surprised I didn't spin out on the SS on heavy pine straw and wet roots.
It seems like they are still getting the word out right now so I'd expect to see them become more available as brand awareness grows. Once I have our prototypes into production I will review those here for general construction/performance as the tread is much more aggressive. They are 36" tires so it won't matter much to anyone but I think it would help shed some light on some of their other 26er/29er offerings.