Expidia
Well-known member
I'm glad this happened to me in my basement because if it happened to me out on the trail, I'd have been screwed!
So I went to swap out the OEM Bontrager tires with a different tread design with a little less road resistance.
I know I can just move the assistance up a notch, but I found myself using the two highest levels (eMTB or Turbo).
This sucks more juice out of my battery and shortens my miles.
It's a though the hub design and I got the front wheel off easy enough, but after letting the air out I could not get the bead to move towards the middle, so I could use the pry levels. It's like they were glued to the rim. They are tubeless ready, but came with tubes.
I figured it must be my old weaker 73 year old hands . So then I said screw it and I'll bring both rims to my LBS and let them do it. Of course, when I went to drop the through the hub rear wheel . . . I could not get it to drop.
I put the front wheel back on and took the bike down to the LBS. He showed me that I had to release the clutch on the derailleur first . . . I've never came across this so I'm glad he showed me. And that some tires just need stronger hands to break the bead.
I said they might as well just remove the OEM tires and mount my new ones for me. He said I can pick it up in a couple of days. I'm OK with that as I still have another E-bike as a back up. But I like to do this stuff myself and then it's ready in 30 minutes. But good that I brought it to them as he said I will also need smaller tubes. My OEM were 2.4 and these new tires are 1.96 in width (700 x 50C).
So other than strong hands, is there another trick to getting a tight bead broken or a tool that can break the bead?
Thanks
So I went to swap out the OEM Bontrager tires with a different tread design with a little less road resistance.
I know I can just move the assistance up a notch, but I found myself using the two highest levels (eMTB or Turbo).
This sucks more juice out of my battery and shortens my miles.
It's a though the hub design and I got the front wheel off easy enough, but after letting the air out I could not get the bead to move towards the middle, so I could use the pry levels. It's like they were glued to the rim. They are tubeless ready, but came with tubes.
I figured it must be my old weaker 73 year old hands . So then I said screw it and I'll bring both rims to my LBS and let them do it. Of course, when I went to drop the through the hub rear wheel . . . I could not get it to drop.
I put the front wheel back on and took the bike down to the LBS. He showed me that I had to release the clutch on the derailleur first . . . I've never came across this so I'm glad he showed me. And that some tires just need stronger hands to break the bead.
I said they might as well just remove the OEM tires and mount my new ones for me. He said I can pick it up in a couple of days. I'm OK with that as I still have another E-bike as a back up. But I like to do this stuff myself and then it's ready in 30 minutes. But good that I brought it to them as he said I will also need smaller tubes. My OEM were 2.4 and these new tires are 1.96 in width (700 x 50C).
So other than strong hands, is there another trick to getting a tight bead broken or a tool that can break the bead?
Thanks