Boracho Muchacho
Member
The title says it all what are peoples thoughts?
I run tubeless but learned the hard way to carry a tube for catastrophic tire failures. I was asking about running inserts with a tubeless setup.
ouch! was that with the Tannus Tubeless?
Tannus and tube, nothing would have stopped that though, joys of commuting. Luckily I was only a couple of miles from homeouch! was that with the Tannus Tubeless?
I am more interested in peoples results using a tubeless setup with the Tannus inserts. Also am I alone in thinking that they look like a dissected pool noodle?Tannus is garbage...UNLESS you ride canals or on the street. I gave them a solid try (8 tubes worth of pinch flats and punctures), and after finally found them a good home in the dumpster. I run Cush Core in all my other bikes, and only held out swapping right away because my Levo had them installed already and the shop wanted a real world test from an aggressive rider (I did not pay for them). They would work if you don't live in Arizona or a place with a lot of pokey things trying to ruin your day. Or if you are a mild rider. If you charge thru things and play in nasty terrain (like rock gardens) they will not hold up. Save yourself a lot of time and money on tubes, and spend the $140 on Cush Core. I have not had a singe flat in over 4 years on any of my bikes with CC installed. Besides just flat protection, you get the ability to run a lower PSI which typically translates to better control and grip.
All that said, yes Tannus is less messy, and very easy to install. Swapping a tube is cake, but still not fun to do on the trail. I had to also carry at least 2 tubes with me, otherwise I didn't feel comfortable.
I am more interested in peoples results using a tubeless setup with the Tannus inserts. Also am I alone in thinking that they look like a dissected pool noodle?
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