I have now and the tyre is coated but no excess liquidPop the bead and take a look
Hi thanks for this, i have popped the bead and had a look and there is no excess liquid in the tyre, should i treat it as a new tyre and add amount recommended for first installationYou should be able to deflate the tyre, remove the valve core then use a 'dipstick' (not me tho ?) long enough to go down the valve and touch the tyre casing - pull the dipstick out and see where the fluid marks up to.
Top up fluid as necessary, reverse above process.
Some sealants e.g. Orange, come with a dipstick.
If effectively dry then yes treat as if new.Hi thanks for this, i have popped the bead and had a look and there is no excess liquid in the tyre, should i treat it as a new tyre and add amount recommended for first installation
Hi thanks for this, i have popped the bead and had a look and there is no excess liquid in the tyre, should i treat it as a new tyre and add amount recommended for first installation
How did the dipstick tell you how much sealant was in there?I found the dipstick option helpful
PerseverenessWhat is the conventional wisdom on this...?
similar to checking the oil in your car, I would think. You rotate the tires so that the valve stem is that the lowest point and any sealant should pull up below that. Remove the valve core and insert dipstick until it touches the tire. If it's all dried up, then there won't be any sealant on the dipstick.How did the dipstick tell you how much sealant was in there?
Yeah. but unlike a car dipstick dipping something into a valve is pretty useless for actually determining the amount of sealant left in your tyre.similar to checking the oil in your car, I would think. You rotate the tires so that the valve stem is that the lowest point and any sealant should pull up below that. Remove the valve core and insert dipstick until it touches the tire. If it's all dried up, then there won't be any sealant on the dipstick.
I don't see how this is any less meaningful. Check the level on the dipstick when sealant is first added to establish a baseline and go from there.Yeah. but unlike a car dipstick dipping something into a valve is pretty useless for actually determining the amount of sealant left in your tyre.
That way you can also empty the tyre of any dried latex balling.
And it doesn't play nice with CushCore which provides further protection as opposed to a very fancy valve.Milkit does a far better job than the "dipstick" idea but it's kinda pricy for what it is
Admittedly it isn't necessarily accurate - but IMO eyeballing a puddle of sealant isn't either - UNTIL you have some experience to judge what you're looking at.How did the dipstick tell you how much sealant was in there?
If only my wife would say that....keep dipping that pointless little stick all you want.
Not sure why but I can't help responding(for the last time cos lifes too short and the sun's shining).You don't need 3 gold stars from Maccy Ds to be able to tell if the sealant puddle inside your tyre is dry, almost dry or plenty full enough to do its job should you put a hole in the casing.
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.