pagheca
Member
Hello everyone,
I have been on a business trip and since the availability of MTB tires here is very limited (and the prices very high), I took the opportunity to buy a pair of new tubeless tires for my Trek Powerfly. In fact, I booked a night in transit at a B&B to find that the B&B had a beautiful bike store downstairs where they gave me an absurdly low price on everything. (I'd rather not say the name, for obvious reasons, but I gave them 10/10 on Booking, also because of the absolutely total courtesy and quality of service...)
In the end I bought 1 Maxxis Minion DHF and one Dissector (it should fit), two valves, the tape and the fluid, I hope they are decent quality (I don't go downhill but just MTB and commuting). And around 29 x 2.4 there wasn't much.
Now I ask you: do you suggest to try to do the conversion to tubeless myself? I have good manual dexterity, I am used to doing even quite complex works, but I have just a few tools at home. because I am renting. And I never did it.
Also, the seller told me that to mount them it is better to have a compressor (which I have), but I was wondering: if one punctures while somewhere far from home, even if it happens infrequently compared to tyres with tubes, is it possible to re-inflate a tubeless just with a small pump? I would hate to find myself in the middle of the woods, alone, 20 km from home, with a flat tire and the inability to inflate it....
cheers
I have been on a business trip and since the availability of MTB tires here is very limited (and the prices very high), I took the opportunity to buy a pair of new tubeless tires for my Trek Powerfly. In fact, I booked a night in transit at a B&B to find that the B&B had a beautiful bike store downstairs where they gave me an absurdly low price on everything. (I'd rather not say the name, for obvious reasons, but I gave them 10/10 on Booking, also because of the absolutely total courtesy and quality of service...)
In the end I bought 1 Maxxis Minion DHF and one Dissector (it should fit), two valves, the tape and the fluid, I hope they are decent quality (I don't go downhill but just MTB and commuting). And around 29 x 2.4 there wasn't much.
Now I ask you: do you suggest to try to do the conversion to tubeless myself? I have good manual dexterity, I am used to doing even quite complex works, but I have just a few tools at home. because I am renting. And I never did it.
Also, the seller told me that to mount them it is better to have a compressor (which I have), but I was wondering: if one punctures while somewhere far from home, even if it happens infrequently compared to tyres with tubes, is it possible to re-inflate a tubeless just with a small pump? I would hate to find myself in the middle of the woods, alone, 20 km from home, with a flat tire and the inability to inflate it....
cheers