I've gone through the ringer trying to find a taller rear tire that can take up to 70 PSI.
Beyond 20 x 2.5", the maximum available pressure goes from 65PSI to 30 PSI once we get to 3.0".
All crappy fatbike tires at that point. My bare minimum is 70PSI capable, so that's not going to work.
I was looking online today for the world's smallest 22" tire and found out about OS20 rims for BMX.
Information on this is generally misleading and vague online. Took a while to sort out.
Looks like:
Regular 20" rim = 406mm bead seat diameter
"OS20" rim = 451mm beat seat diameter, sometimes referred to as 20" as well ( ??? )
Regular 22" rim = 457mm bead seat diameter
Visual on the size difference between 20" and ~22" aka OS20.
The only reason this wheel size exists is to maximize the total wheel diameter around the absolute limit for BMX racing, apparently

( and it's usually paired with 1.25" tires when crammed into a regular 20" frame )
I'm going to refer to OS20 as ~22" from here on. Because that's what it is.
~22" tires get as small as 1.125". I think the bike could fit this.
Let's do some calcs to see how much margin we have though.
Size chart from Cateye Japan covers these odd sizes and their diameters.
The Maxarya will accept a standard 20" x 3.0", which i don't have a diameter for. So we have to compute it.
From a .7 inch difference in tire size on the above chart, we see a diameter change of 115mm
1.95" + 0.7" = 2.65"
2.65" + 0.35" = 3.0"
115mm added diameter x 1.5 = 172.5mm added
Therefore the 20 x 3.0" tire should = 1737.5mm total diameter ( assuming that these values scale linearly )
Looking at the 451mm rim, we see that each 0.25" = a 70mm diameter gain
A 1 5/8" tire should have a diameter of 1685mm.
If we make that a 1 6/8" tire, we'd be at 1720mm. ( add 35mm or half of the 70mm diameter gain )
This translates a ~22" x 1.75" tire, with a little space to spare. Not bad!
It also looks like some ~22" BMX tires exist in 1.6", 1.75", and 1.85" sizes:
Vee Speed Booster OS20 Tire
https://us.sourcebmx.com/products/tioga-powerblock-os20-race-tyre#:~:text=Tioga's%20Powerblock%20OS20%20tire%20is,Price%20Match%20Request
..and they take 110 PSI, so that fits the requirement
These tires are on the lightweight side so i think stans is required so that i'm not popping tubes all day.
The bonus is that this would require a lot less stans ( and therefore add less rolling resistance ) versus the 20" x 3.0" setup i was thinking.
Plan of action?
Lace up a rear ~22" bike wheel with a 1.75" tire ( will get a 1.85" if i have a few millimeters left ).
VS my current 20" x 2.4", this wheel should have 4.8% larger diameter.
So i'd expect:
- 2.4% less motion when hitting curbs ( reduced air volume somewhat negates the diameter gain )
- 2.4% better rear NVH when going over choppy roads ( same idea )
- ~5% reduction in rolling resistance because there's less rubber to deform + i'm going from a non-ideal rim to tire width match to an ideal one.
- ? additional rolling resistance reduction because the above tires are BMX racing tires
This is a better scenario than going to a 20" x 3.0" and worsening the existing rolling resistance problem because i can't get the PSI high enough.
As for this front 20" x 2.8".. i think it's a keeper.. i won't reduce the size of the tire unless i find that i have issues with the pendulum pedals, when they arrive.
Looks like it's time to feed the bike more parts!