Thing is, really wide tires are sooooooooooooooo easy to spoon on. Zip-tie tire mounting just seems really silly, unless you're somehow stuck somewhere where you have the need to mount a tire, no tire irons, and a goodly supply of zip-ties.
Anyhoo, Motion Pro tar arns are that which you seek. They're sold absolutely everywhere that deals with dirt bikes. Get one long one and two short ones. Make sure you get forged levers, not the stamped steel cheapies you've already encountered. This looks like a nice set: http://www.rockymountainatvmc.com/p/...m=tire%20irons
There are other good brands, of course -- the "Tusk" brand from RockyMountainATVMC.com is excellent as well. I carry three of these "Ultra Lite" tire irons on the KLR650, and yes, I've changed a tube on the trail with no trouble.
One trick for breaking beads that more people should know about: all you need are three small tire irons. Deflate the tire, lay the wheel down, then insert two tire irons between the tire and the rim with about two inches of space between and the "hook" at the tip facing up. Insert the third tire iron in the middle with the "hook" facing down (into the tire).
Push the two tire irons down with one hand, and pull the middle tire iron up with your other hand. With a little wiggling, you'll start to push the bead down. If it won't go all the way, move the arrangement an inch or so and work the bead loose a little at a time.
This will break the roughest, toughest bead in under a minute, tubeless or tubed. It's very safe, and done correctly with decent quality tire irons, won't damage the tire or rim. No brute force is needed -- no jumping on the bead, no trying to break the bead with the kickstand, or any other potentially disastrous methods.
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