How does one seriously deal with flat tires?
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How does one seriously deal with flat tires?
I used to live in Boise, Idaho. That was goat-head city. The Slime product did an excellent job of resealing the tube after hitting a goat-head most of the time. The trick was not to pull out the goat-head. If the slimmed tire did ever go flat due to a goat-head that stubbornly did not reseal, the remedy was this:
a. spin the tire a bit to distribute the green fluid inside the tube
b. inflate tire to low pressure, 20-30 psi, and ride from 12/ mile to a mile
c. ensure the tire is holding low pressure while riding
d. inflate tire to normal pressure and the rider is good to go
The Slime does not likely work magic for large punctures as from screws, nails and staples. A new tube or patch job is then in order.
I just got a flat while riding home in Lawton, Oklahoma this morning. The bad guy was small staple in the grooved area of the slimed tire. I pulled the staple out and attempted the a thru d method above but that failed miserably after two tries. The spare tube came out of my tool kit and the rest was history.
I have not been able to make patches stick with ordinary rubber cement with tubes filled with Slime. I've read that cold vulcanizing fluid is far superior but will it hold on a tube filled with Slime?
I don't seem to find those old-fashioned hot-patch kits that are lit with a match.
Is hot-vulcanization of a bike tube still possible in 2019?
Can patches be removed somehow that have been vulcanized?
Why would one want to removed a vulcanized patch, you ask?
Well, by some freak misfortune, the tire might get punctured by a screw in the future right in the same spot that it was formerly patched. It would seem prudent to remove the old patch before performing a new patch job.You don't want to put a new patch over an old one as that would make big lump in the tire.
Will a heat gun soften a hot or cold vulcanized patch where it will easily peel right off?
1. what tools/supplies are need to do a proper and strong vulcanized patch repair?
2. what equipment/methods are need to remove an old vulcanized patch should it too become punctured?
Since there doesn't seem to be any goat-heads in Lawton, OK, should I just forgo the slime altogether?
Depending on how often you hit nails, inner tubes get expensive fast by simply replacing them with new ones and throwing punctured ones out often. Bicycle tires, unlike tubeless steel-belted automobile tires, are very fragile against sharp pointed, even small, objects.
Slime also gets expensive to keep buying for new replaced tubes to boot.
a. spin the tire a bit to distribute the green fluid inside the tube
b. inflate tire to low pressure, 20-30 psi, and ride from 12/ mile to a mile
c. ensure the tire is holding low pressure while riding
d. inflate tire to normal pressure and the rider is good to go
The Slime does not likely work magic for large punctures as from screws, nails and staples. A new tube or patch job is then in order.
I just got a flat while riding home in Lawton, Oklahoma this morning. The bad guy was small staple in the grooved area of the slimed tire. I pulled the staple out and attempted the a thru d method above but that failed miserably after two tries. The spare tube came out of my tool kit and the rest was history.
I have not been able to make patches stick with ordinary rubber cement with tubes filled with Slime. I've read that cold vulcanizing fluid is far superior but will it hold on a tube filled with Slime?
I don't seem to find those old-fashioned hot-patch kits that are lit with a match.
Is hot-vulcanization of a bike tube still possible in 2019?
Can patches be removed somehow that have been vulcanized?
Why would one want to removed a vulcanized patch, you ask?
Well, by some freak misfortune, the tire might get punctured by a screw in the future right in the same spot that it was formerly patched. It would seem prudent to remove the old patch before performing a new patch job.You don't want to put a new patch over an old one as that would make big lump in the tire.
Will a heat gun soften a hot or cold vulcanized patch where it will easily peel right off?
1. what tools/supplies are need to do a proper and strong vulcanized patch repair?
2. what equipment/methods are need to remove an old vulcanized patch should it too become punctured?
Since there doesn't seem to be any goat-heads in Lawton, OK, should I just forgo the slime altogether?
Depending on how often you hit nails, inner tubes get expensive fast by simply replacing them with new ones and throwing punctured ones out often. Bicycle tires, unlike tubeless steel-belted automobile tires, are very fragile against sharp pointed, even small, objects.
Slime also gets expensive to keep buying for new replaced tubes to boot.
Last edited by JonBailey; 08-12-19 at 12:23 PM.
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You really need to move. Clearly everything in Lawton OK has turned against you.
#4
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I had a spare tube at least this morning.
In Boise, I had no spare tube and hit a screw about three miles from home. The Slime was useless in that case. It was long trip home. Two mile walk, ride to the VA hospital ER in an ambulance due to chest pains, heart palpitations and trouble breathing due to the over-exertion of pushing the bike two miles at high altitude. A ride home in a taxi via Julia Davis park by the zoo in a compact-SUV cab where the bike had to be put in the back of the dinky little Toyota Matrix. I broke my expensive $20 Hafny mirror doing this and the cab fare was $15 with tip. I asked the dispatcher if they had a minvan in their taxi fleet. They said only little SUVs and Ford Crown Vics. No bumper racks for bikes also on the taxis.
After that, I said no more bike rides without a complete kit to change out a tube on the road.
Yes, Lawton is rough in many respects but flat ties aren't an exclusive thing here. At least there doesn't seem to be any thorns here.
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The Flat Attack site says tires can be patched as normal. I think I will invest in cold vulcanizing fluid for patching in case a patch is ever needed.
#6
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#7
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Ditch the slime and use nothing but extra thick (aka thorn-resistant) inner tubes, PLUS your choice of the following lines of top-ranked flat-resistant tires:
1) Schwalbe Ultra Marathon
2) Specialized Armadillo
3) Bontrager Hard Case
4) Continental Gator Skin
I've live in Boise for 14 years, ride everywhere daily, and I have not suffered a flat due to goatheads in over 13 years.
1) Schwalbe Ultra Marathon
2) Specialized Armadillo
3) Bontrager Hard Case
4) Continental Gator Skin
I've live in Boise for 14 years, ride everywhere daily, and I have not suffered a flat due to goatheads in over 13 years.
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I just ordered some:
-REMA TT 02 Tour Patch Kit, Large (has VULCANIZE, not rubber, cement in a tube)
-Flat Attack Tire Sealer, 8 oz. bottle
-Hafny Bar End Bike Mirror, Stainless Steel Lens, Safe Rearview Mirror (to replace the one that got cracked in the Boise cab ride early this year, Krazy Glue won't permanently mend it)
-OK sales tax
$31.41 Total
-all free of shipping fees from amazon.com
I still have four spare good inner tubes.
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my experience with slime has been very negative (except for the auto version and slow leak tires )
I have been using orange seal.....and it seams to do will with slow, low volume issues, but hit large tack and it just sprayed out as both the tube and the tire were well punctured.
I always carry 2 tube and a rema patch kit (there is a differfence Rema only)
...and a pump
I have been using orange seal.....and it seams to do will with slow, low volume issues, but hit large tack and it just sprayed out as both the tube and the tire were well punctured.
I always carry 2 tube and a rema patch kit (there is a differfence Rema only)
...and a pump
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Life is too short not to ride the best bike you have, as much as you can
(looking for Torpado Super light frame/fork or for Raleigh International frame fork 58cm)
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My approach to the problem
I am a year round commuter and do not carry a phone. I fight flats with a number of approaches.
1) Velox Rim Tape
2) Change out the tubes every year, if water / snow / ice and salt gets on the tube it seems to deteriorate a tube by making them less expandable causing splits
3) 4 pumps of Slime, that takes care of the slow leaks
4) Schwalbe Marathon 365, first line of defense
5) Mr tuffy, 2nd line of defense against larger objects
6) Bike pump
7) A spare tube, use this first to get back on the road fastest
8) A handful of Park no-glue patches, use this if I did not catch what caused the flat
9) Cold vulcanizing patch kit, use this if I run out of no-glue patches
10) 6" of Duct tape to deal with a tire issue
Got it down to 1 or 2 flats/year
1) Velox Rim Tape
2) Change out the tubes every year, if water / snow / ice and salt gets on the tube it seems to deteriorate a tube by making them less expandable causing splits
3) 4 pumps of Slime, that takes care of the slow leaks
4) Schwalbe Marathon 365, first line of defense
5) Mr tuffy, 2nd line of defense against larger objects
6) Bike pump
7) A spare tube, use this first to get back on the road fastest
8) A handful of Park no-glue patches, use this if I did not catch what caused the flat
9) Cold vulcanizing patch kit, use this if I run out of no-glue patches
10) 6" of Duct tape to deal with a tire issue
Got it down to 1 or 2 flats/year
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Move?
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Will a heat gun soften a hot or cold vulcanized patch where it will easily peel right off?
1. what tools/supplies are need to do a proper and strong vulcanized patch repair?
2. what equipment/methods are need to remove an old vulcanized patch should it too become punctured?
1. what tools/supplies are need to do a proper and strong vulcanized patch repair?
2. what equipment/methods are need to remove an old vulcanized patch should it too become punctured?
If you have the misfortune to get a puncture through a previous patch (which seems really unlikely, but I guess could happen), that's probably a time to throw out the inner tube.
#13
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Better still, I avoid them at all costs. First, don't ride where there's lots of debris. Second, watch out for it. And third, get puncture resistant tire, liners, tubulars. So I ride a fraction slower. You may have a bit more speed, then negate it when your have to dismount and fix your flat. Think, tortoise and the hare.
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Why would one want to removed a vulcanized patch, you ask?
Well, by some freak misfortune, the tire might get punctured by a screw in the future right in the same spot that it was formerly patched. It would seem prudent to remove the old patch before performing a new patch job......
Well, by some freak misfortune, the tire might get punctured by a screw in the future right in the same spot that it was formerly patched. It would seem prudent to remove the old patch before performing a new patch job......
I would try and find a deal on some quality tubes, in bulk, and back the truck up !!
(seems like I recall recently seeing some 5 or 6 packs of Continental tubes, but I can't recall from who.)
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Gatorskins, spare tube and patch kit. I tried Slime once and it was an awful, messy failure. I cycle thousands of (road) miles a year in goathead country (Colorado and Arizona) and one a year on average gets through. Sometimes I hit a patch of them, pull out dozens, no flat. Sometimes a slow leak. Wires from radial tires get through about as often.
I love those Gatorskins. And they're easy to handle (mine are wire bead). Front flats take five minutes, rears take seven. Road Morph pump helps a lot.
Negative on replacing a patch. I've tried it a couple of times.
I love those Gatorskins. And they're easy to handle (mine are wire bead). Front flats take five minutes, rears take seven. Road Morph pump helps a lot.
Negative on replacing a patch. I've tried it a couple of times.
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Here's what I figure about removing a patch. The circumference of a 27 inch tire is about 85 inches, and let's say a patch is an inch across. So a patched tube has a 1-in-85 chance of getting punctured through an existing patch. Combine that with the already low probability of getting a puncture, and it goes into the "interesting failure mode, don't worry about it" bucket for me.
#19
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i use tire liners and rim tape and almost never get a flat riding the streets of brooklyn. used to get flats all the time before, even three in a row the same day.
i dont usually carry spares or patches with me, although when i can i use the cold vulcanizing fluid and patches to fix tubes and reuse them. i get kits, which never have enough patches for how much glue you get, so i ordered just a sheet of 50 patches for three dollars, so im set on those for a while...
i dont usually carry spares or patches with me, although when i can i use the cold vulcanizing fluid and patches to fix tubes and reuse them. i get kits, which never have enough patches for how much glue you get, so i ordered just a sheet of 50 patches for three dollars, so im set on those for a while...
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I’ve found the opposite- I always end up with extra patches and no glue because the glue dries out in the month or more before I get another flat. Anyone have tricks to sealing the glue up well after you open it? I’ve tried putting foil under the cap, which helped a little, but those plastic caps just don’t make a very good seal at all and usually only have a couple of threads to hold them on.
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I’ve found the opposite- I always end up with extra patches and no glue because the glue dries out in the month or more before I get another flat. Anyone have tricks to sealing the glue up well after you open it? I’ve tried putting foil under the cap, which helped a little, but those plastic caps just don’t make a very good seal at all and usually only have a couple of threads to hold them on.
I keep old tubes of glue indoors to use for patching tire tubes at home. (I've been pretty lucky that way, getting slow leaks that I can fix at home, on a break, or in camp.)
#22
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What are tubes? Some kind of antique thing? Yes I do carry one for backup. I run tubeless on all my bikes, commuter, fat, mountain and bikepacking. Get a tubeless rim and tire. Don't try to muck around on this point. I did get one 6 mm or so gash on a bikepacking trip, center of tread, front tire. Took out my curved needle with carpet thread, 3 stitches, super glue, waited for 10 minutes. Aired up just fine. Still using it 2 years later. Add sealant on a regular basis through the removable valve. Easy.
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I've worked in the bike industry as a mechanic for 35+ years. I also commute to work by bike daily 36-40 miles round trip. I fix flats every day. In my experience, goathead thorns are the most common cause. I don't really like slime because it has a tendency to clog up the valve cores and cause a slow leak out of the valve. I've used the heavier duty tires such as the schwalbe marathon and the conti gatorskins. Those both work well, but they ride like you have garden hoses for tires. I moved to Denver from Oklahoma last year (I'm very familiar with the goatheads in Oklahoma), and I was getting 1-2 flats per month at first. A lot of presta tubes these days have a removable valve core, so I started putting tubeless tire sealant in my tubes. The result after almost a year is I haven't had a single flat.
I made a video of an ongoing experiment I started about a month and a half ago. I installed some lighter weight road tires, tubes with Bontrager TLR sealant and used it on my commuter bike daily through the sketchiest sections of my commute. So far after 1200+ miles, no flats. I'll make a follow up video soon.
I made a video of an ongoing experiment I started about a month and a half ago. I installed some lighter weight road tires, tubes with Bontrager TLR sealant and used it on my commuter bike daily through the sketchiest sections of my commute. So far after 1200+ miles, no flats. I'll make a follow up video soon.
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I've worked in the bike industry as a mechanic for 35+ years. I also commute to work by bike daily 36-40 miles round trip. I fix flats every day. In my experience, goathead thorns are the most common cause. I don't really like slime because it has a tendency to clog up the valve cores and cause a slow leak out of the valve. I've used the heavier duty tires such as the schwalbe marathon and the conti gatorskins. Those both work well, but they ride like you have garden hoses for tires. I moved to Denver from Oklahoma last year (I'm very familiar with the goatheads in Oklahoma), and I was getting 1-2 flats per month at first. A lot of presta tubes these days have a removable valve core, so I started putting tubeless tire sealant in my tubes. The result after almost a year is I haven't had a single flat.
I made a video of an ongoing experiment I started about a month and a half ago. I installed some lighter weight road tires, tubes with Bontrager TLR sealant and used it on my commuter bike daily through the sketchiest sections of my commute. So far after 1200+ miles, no flats. I'll make a follow up video soon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhx9LPe1qbk
I made a video of an ongoing experiment I started about a month and a half ago. I installed some lighter weight road tires, tubes with Bontrager TLR sealant and used it on my commuter bike daily through the sketchiest sections of my commute. So far after 1200+ miles, no flats. I'll make a follow up video soon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhx9LPe1qbk
Hopefully I'll have better luck with the NEMA cold-vulc (non rubber cement) patch kit and the green Flat Attack! product. I will still keep one spare good tube to boot while doing my morning pedal in town. I never go more than 5 miles from the house anyway. I hate calling the taxi cabs in Lawton as they are total rude arse-holes to deal with. This stupid Schwinn-branded "BSO" is now costing me over $600 to date with all the extra crap I've been dumping money into over the past almost two years now. My philosophy is that humble bicycles were never meant to be expensive toys. They are the common conveyances of those in homeless shelters after all. They aren't cars and shouldn't have automobile-like costs associated with them. Bikes nowadays is just a big fashionable money game to some. This modern world is just filled with too many gadgets. It takes away from the simple pleasure of just pedaling out in the fresh air.
Last edited by JonBailey; 08-13-19 at 10:11 AM.