Vittoria Terreno Wet G2.0 gravel tyre review
The products mentioned in this article are selected or reviewed independently by our journalists. When you buy through links on our site we may earn an affiliate commission, but this never influences our opinion.

Vittoria Terreno Wet G2.0 gravel tyre review

The best mud-slaying gravel tyre on the market?

Our rating

4.5

60.00
64.00
50.00
93.00

Katherine Moore / Our Media

Published: February 24, 2023 at 2:00 pm

Our review
One of the very best gravel tyres for muddy conditions, born in the crucible of cyclocross

Pros:

Unrivalled grip in mud; reasonably priced; light for an aggressively treaded tyre

Cons:

Slightly porous sidewalls means regular reinflation required

The most aggressively treaded option in Vittoria’s cyclocross and gravel line-up, the Terreno Wet is a lightweight tubeless-ready tyre.

It excels, as the name might suggest, in the type of wet conditions usually experienced in a UK autumn and winter.

We’re not just talking about wet roads and gravel though; the mud is where the Terreno Wet truly exceeds. It makes light work of typical winter gravel riding conditions.

Vittoria Terreno Wet G2.0 specifications and details

The regular, widely spaced knobs of the Vittoria Terreno Wet tread. Katherine Moore / Our Media

Originally designed for cyclocross racing, the wider 38mm Terreno Wet tyre from Vittoria has become a popular gravel bike tyre for wet and muddy winter riding.

Widely spaced knobs characterise the tread, with the lug direction alternating to give a broken centre line.

The knobs also feature siping to aid wet-weather traction, shedding water from the tread.

The Terreno Wet is only available with Vittoria’s TNT endurance casing. This includes an additional layer of puncture protection for the sidewalls compared to the lighter, racier TLR casing that can be found on the Terreno Dry.

With tubeless-ready options also available in 31mm and 33mm widths, gravel riders with limited clearance on a cyclocross frame can also benefit from these mud tyres.

Unusually, the sidewalls are a mid-grey only.

Vittoria Terreno Wet G2.0 performance

The central blocks alternate direction to give a near-continuous centre line for improved rolling speed. Katherine Moore / Our Media

I needed a sturdy tyre lever and a little more persuasion than most to get the Vittoria Terreno Wet tyres onto the rims of my WTB i23 CZR wheels.

Having said that, they weren’t too troublesome.

The tubeless setup was fairly straightforward, using an Airshot to deliver 120psi into the tyres in one go and satisfyingly pop the bead onto the rim.

Inflated, the tyre measures up 41mm wide on 23mm internal rim diameter wheels, so don’t let the narrower nominal width put you off.

I’ve also used these tyres in the past, still measuring up wider than claimed at 40mm on 21mm internal rims.

The biggest plus is the Terreno Wet's performance in the mud. That comes as no great surprise, because the Terreno tyres have been around some time, originally designed as cyclocross tyres where mud is (often) a fact of life.

I found absolutely no slipping when riding through mud. That remained the case even in deeper, claggier and churned-up tracks.

The Terreno Wet bites in giving you traction no matter the conditions.

The widely spaced knobs also meant mud shed easily off the tyre, preventing any build-up in the frame or fork.

This is important for cyclocross racing, but can also help prevent any damage to your frameset on muckier gravel rides.

The only gravel tyres I’ve found to challenge the mud grip of the Terreno Wets is the cross-country inspired WTB Sendero. Those tyres are only available in a 47mm width for 650b wheels, and (for the record) are considerably slower on the road.

The Terreno Wet tyres rolled well over rocks, roots and dry earth too, offering good all-round gravel performance.

On the road, they weren’t quite as nippy as some gravel tyres with a slick, unbroken central tread – such as the Hutchinson Tundra, for example – but they’re hardly excessively draggy.

Regardless, any drag on tarmac is a small price to pay for the exceptional mud performance.

I didn’t experience any punctures during the testing period, even though I put the tyres through their paces on some technical rocky descents and rooty singletrack.

The sidewalls did seem a little more porous than some other tyres though, which meant I regularly reinflated the tyres to my desired pressure before riding out.

Vittoria Terreno Wet G2.0 bottom line

The sidewalls are a signature grey, found only on Vittoria's tyres. Katherine Moore / Our Media

If your winter gravel rides often include a substantial amount of mud negotiation, then look no further.

The confidence this tyre induces means you’ll be taking a fast, straight line when ploughing through filthy, muddy ground, rather than skirting around it.

As an added bonus, the Terreno Wet tyres are no slouch on the road, either.

Product

Brand vittoria
Price 93.00 AUD,60.00 EUR,50.00 GBP,64.00 USD
Weight 479.0000, GRAM (700c x 38mm) - 500g claimed

Features

br_TPI 120
Features ‘Anthracite’ grey sidewalls

Tubeless ready
br_tyreSizes 700c x 31mm; 700c x 33mm; 700c x 38mm
br_punctureProtection Sidewall protection