RebornRider
Well-known member
Last night I replaced the rim tape (Stans) after thoroughly cleaning the rim with alcohol and then brake cleaner. I inspected the rim for flaws and found none. I installed a new Stans valve stem after carefully poking a hole in the rim tape with an awl. The hole was not bigger than the valve stem. I poured in 4 oz of Orange Seal Endurance and mounted a brand new Assegai. I did the "wobble wheel" thing to spread the sealant around both beads and sidewalls. After mounting the assembly on the bike, I spun the tire a bunch of times, both slow and fast spinning.
Last night the tire pressure was at 41 psi. 12 hours later it is at 39 psi. I do not see or hear any sign of a leak.
My point is that I've mounted many tires as carefully as I can, but every one has lost 1 to 2 psi between rides (roughly every second day). Either I'm doing something wrong every time I mount a tire, or Maxxis tubeless-ready tires will slowly lose pressure the way a rubber balloon loses pressure over a few days.
Do you guys have to add air every day or two to maintain your target tire pressure?
If you don't, what is your secret?
I'm used to car tires that might need topping up once or twice a year. This every ride thing with the MTB tires makes me think I'm doing something wrong.
Last night the tire pressure was at 41 psi. 12 hours later it is at 39 psi. I do not see or hear any sign of a leak.
My point is that I've mounted many tires as carefully as I can, but every one has lost 1 to 2 psi between rides (roughly every second day). Either I'm doing something wrong every time I mount a tire, or Maxxis tubeless-ready tires will slowly lose pressure the way a rubber balloon loses pressure over a few days.
Do you guys have to add air every day or two to maintain your target tire pressure?
If you don't, what is your secret?
I'm used to car tires that might need topping up once or twice a year. This every ride thing with the MTB tires makes me think I'm doing something wrong.