GrahamPaul
E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Tubeless isn't always as straightforward as it ought to be. Especially when you (by that I mean "I") do something stupid.
I've been running tubeless for a few years now on my normal bike and the first thing I did when the Focus arrived a couple of years ago was to upgrade to tubeless. The joke around here is that tyre TPI refers to "Thorns Per Inch", so tubeless is essential.
However, I hit a snag with the Focus: the wheels have eccentric spokes so that the spoke holes are all up on one shoulder of the rim and not in the centre valley. This makes seating the bead difficult because of the little "dents" that occur in the rim tape under pressure in the rather large and oval spoke holes. With brand new rim tape and a nice clean new tyre it's easy enough to pop the bead onto the rim with plenty of washing up liquid as lube.
However, when it's time to change that tyre, the spoke hole dents make it impossible to pop the bead on, no matter how big the airshot can or CO2 cannister. So I always seat the tyre with an inner tube, leaving the spoke hole side seated to remove the tube and pop the other bead on. A bit of a pain (literally) breaking Schwalbe beads away from the rim, but it doesn't take too long and it isn't something I needed to do every week.
I left the bike out in the sunshine to dry after a wash a week or two back. Came back to find a flat front tyre. Now I'd been having a bit of trouble with the valve seating in the rim (so I thought), so I popped the non-spoke hole bead and changed the valve. Popped the tyre back on the rim but couldn't get the tyre to stay up for long. There's a tiny hole in the rim which was blowing hard. So the leak was the rim tape.
Nearly busted my fingers taking the bead off the spoke side because it was so well bedded in, but eventually got the tyre off. The rim tape had split on spoke holes in 3 locations. I guess the tyres had got so hot that the rim tape had warmed and weakened enough to split on the holes - some of those holes are sharp.
Okay, no problem. Rim washed, scrubbed, picked clean and then new rim tape applied.
Now I did something truly, utterly and incredibly stupid...
It seemed to me that the tyre bead was a bit manky and wasn't going to sit on the rim bead too well. So I thought I would probably need to use an inner tube to get the spoke hole side seated. But there was no way I'd ever get that tube back out again given the half litre of sticky sealant gummed to the tyre innards. Genius that I am, I cleaned out the inside of the tyre. Looked like new, it did.
Took a look at the nice clean tyre and the shiny, tight, new rim tape and decided that I didn't now need to use an inner tube. Used a bit of washing up liquid and my airshot can and, BANG, straight onto the rim beads with no effort. Then the tyre went flat. Quickly...
A quick pump up and I found a hole letting through loads of air. No problem, I thought, I can plug that. (Happily, I hadn't yet put any sealant in the tyre. I make a mess if I put the sealant in before seating the tyre. I'll stick with shoving it in through the valve. That works for me.) I marked the hole but seemed to be feeling quite a bit of a draught from elsewhere while I had my thumb covering the hole. Aha!, I thought, must be another hole. So I liberally covered my tyre in the washing up liquid... It bubbled everywhere. I've seen tea bags less permeable than that tyre!
Yup. I'd managed to remove every bit of seal from every puncture and thorn prick that that tyre had had. If I'd have added sealant, I'd have whitewashed my garage with it. The worst of it was, I'd done such a good job on seating the tyre, I couldn't get the bloody thing off the rim again. After what felt like a week of struggling and cursing, I did shift it. Happily, I'd bought a couple of spares when I last bought tyres (they were in a sale) and a few minutes later I had wheel sealed, pumped and back in the bike.
However, that left me with a partly usedtea bag tyre which I have been wondering what to do with. It seems silly to throw away a tyre which was perfectly good up until I removed it guts. Especially at the moment, when any spare parts seem to be like hen's teeth. Especially on the edge of Europe, as we are.
Last night, on a club ride, I mentioned this. One of the guys said that a bike shop in the next town had a special tyre tape for just this purpose.
This set me to thinking. I've never seen a "tyre tape". Does such a thing exist? Or is it just Gorilla tape?
It seems to me that Gorilla tape would provide a good enough seal to the inside of the tyre until the sealant had done its magic and coated the tyre copiously.
Has anyone done this? Can you see any disadvantages?
Someone else must have done this... or am I the only one that stupid?
I've been running tubeless for a few years now on my normal bike and the first thing I did when the Focus arrived a couple of years ago was to upgrade to tubeless. The joke around here is that tyre TPI refers to "Thorns Per Inch", so tubeless is essential.
However, I hit a snag with the Focus: the wheels have eccentric spokes so that the spoke holes are all up on one shoulder of the rim and not in the centre valley. This makes seating the bead difficult because of the little "dents" that occur in the rim tape under pressure in the rather large and oval spoke holes. With brand new rim tape and a nice clean new tyre it's easy enough to pop the bead onto the rim with plenty of washing up liquid as lube.
However, when it's time to change that tyre, the spoke hole dents make it impossible to pop the bead on, no matter how big the airshot can or CO2 cannister. So I always seat the tyre with an inner tube, leaving the spoke hole side seated to remove the tube and pop the other bead on. A bit of a pain (literally) breaking Schwalbe beads away from the rim, but it doesn't take too long and it isn't something I needed to do every week.
I left the bike out in the sunshine to dry after a wash a week or two back. Came back to find a flat front tyre. Now I'd been having a bit of trouble with the valve seating in the rim (so I thought), so I popped the non-spoke hole bead and changed the valve. Popped the tyre back on the rim but couldn't get the tyre to stay up for long. There's a tiny hole in the rim which was blowing hard. So the leak was the rim tape.
Nearly busted my fingers taking the bead off the spoke side because it was so well bedded in, but eventually got the tyre off. The rim tape had split on spoke holes in 3 locations. I guess the tyres had got so hot that the rim tape had warmed and weakened enough to split on the holes - some of those holes are sharp.
Okay, no problem. Rim washed, scrubbed, picked clean and then new rim tape applied.
Now I did something truly, utterly and incredibly stupid...
It seemed to me that the tyre bead was a bit manky and wasn't going to sit on the rim bead too well. So I thought I would probably need to use an inner tube to get the spoke hole side seated. But there was no way I'd ever get that tube back out again given the half litre of sticky sealant gummed to the tyre innards. Genius that I am, I cleaned out the inside of the tyre. Looked like new, it did.
Took a look at the nice clean tyre and the shiny, tight, new rim tape and decided that I didn't now need to use an inner tube. Used a bit of washing up liquid and my airshot can and, BANG, straight onto the rim beads with no effort. Then the tyre went flat. Quickly...
A quick pump up and I found a hole letting through loads of air. No problem, I thought, I can plug that. (Happily, I hadn't yet put any sealant in the tyre. I make a mess if I put the sealant in before seating the tyre. I'll stick with shoving it in through the valve. That works for me.) I marked the hole but seemed to be feeling quite a bit of a draught from elsewhere while I had my thumb covering the hole. Aha!, I thought, must be another hole. So I liberally covered my tyre in the washing up liquid... It bubbled everywhere. I've seen tea bags less permeable than that tyre!
Yup. I'd managed to remove every bit of seal from every puncture and thorn prick that that tyre had had. If I'd have added sealant, I'd have whitewashed my garage with it. The worst of it was, I'd done such a good job on seating the tyre, I couldn't get the bloody thing off the rim again. After what felt like a week of struggling and cursing, I did shift it. Happily, I'd bought a couple of spares when I last bought tyres (they were in a sale) and a few minutes later I had wheel sealed, pumped and back in the bike.
However, that left me with a partly used
Last night, on a club ride, I mentioned this. One of the guys said that a bike shop in the next town had a special tyre tape for just this purpose.
This set me to thinking. I've never seen a "tyre tape". Does such a thing exist? Or is it just Gorilla tape?
It seems to me that Gorilla tape would provide a good enough seal to the inside of the tyre until the sealant had done its magic and coated the tyre copiously.
Has anyone done this? Can you see any disadvantages?
Someone else must have done this... or am I the only one that stupid?