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Originally Posted by Six jours
(Post 15643449)
Bummer. I don't know anyone who will accept returns for glued tires. One of the downsides of tubulars, I guess - sometimes you lose the lottery.
FWIW, I have been happily rolling around on the 25mm "Paris-Roubaix" FMBs the last few months. $225 for the pair hurts at first, but the pain eases...
Originally Posted by gomango
(Post 15642915)
Defective tire.
Return it. |
Originally Posted by CV-6
(Post 15643949)
Probably more hassle than it is worth. Got it from Ribble in UK and I have not seen them in stock for some time. I paid about half what they list for now, so it does not hurt as much as it might have.
I did send back a defective saddle to Ribble though and they did a great job getting everything credited. |
Re. tire savers: in my experience they do prevent flats - especially on the rear - but the whine from them drives me bat**** in no time.
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The tubular tire I had mounted on the rear of my bike had a little rippling at the edges of the rubber where it meets the sidewall. It's an older tubular from the 80s, but the sidewalls were in good condition, lots of tread, still felt supple. It's also a Vittoria Squadre Prof seta, too nice a tire to let go to waste. I'd been intending to glue down the edges, but I didn't think much of it, other than it being a cosmetic issue.
Yesterday, I rode up the 10+ mile climb to Mt. Diablo to watch the finish of the penultimate stage of the Tour of CA. After the broom wagon went through, the entire stretch of the mountain became one mass of spectators on foot and bike, support vehicles, cops, pro riders making their way to the waiting team bus at the bottom, team cars, and spectators on foot, shuttle buses, etc. all trying to get off the mountain ahead of the person behind them. I felt like I was leaving the Bear Mountain picnic. Not far down the descent, I thought I heard a faint noise coming from the rear of the bike, gave a a couple looks down, but everything seemed fine and I could not locate the sound while moving. I though perhaps it was the base tape on the tubular grazing the brake pad. I kept going, reluctant to stop before everyone else at the finish line started clogging the road. About half way down, I caught on to two BMC riders and held their wheel to the bottom, desceding through the crowds faster than most. I was enjoying riding on the wheel of these BMC riders while trying to shadow their line. The old steel bike felt great on the long descent and was handling the curves as well as any of the carbon wonders. Now at the bottom, with less wind noise I could hear the noise again. I dismounted and was startled to see that about 10 inches of rubber had peeled off the cotton casing, and was folded over to the side. I had just come down the long twisting descent inches from cars and other riders while riding on cotton casing. Yikes, close one. Any, this is a roundabout way of providing a cautionary tale. If you have some old tubular tires that are begining to ruffle around the edges of the rubber, beware that the glue holding the rubber to the casing may be compromised overall. As I inspected the rubber on the tire more closely, I realized that it did not take much effort to pull away the rubber from the casing in other places as well. Inspect your old tires! http://i850.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps57cab72d.jpg Bonus photo: http://i850.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps2bcba545.jpg |
Originally Posted by gomango
(Post 15643702)
If I need another, I'll pm our man Rootboy. :)
Although nothing wrong about picking them up from JH. (actually, either way is fine by me. Somebody's buying them, I'm pleased to say. Jan just ordered some more) :) |
Whao, Gaucho. That is ugly. And, it seems odd for your location but maybe not, .... that looks like mold or mildew where the base tape glue was! Ye gods.....
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Originally Posted by Six jours
(Post 15644054)
... - but the whine from them drives me bat**** in no time.
Not quite so noisy. |
+1 for spacing just above the tire. They last longer too. Bend them to the profile of the tire to get the radius to the sidewall and cover all the tread.
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Originally Posted by Chombi
(Post 15643485)
I just found out that the squeaking sound that continues to happen on my Line Seeker's front wheel when I ride it was being caused by the Veloflex Criterium tub on it not totally adhered to my front wheel's Fiamme Ergal rim at one section. I don't know if it's the Vittoria glue, which I used in lieu of the usual Continental glue (I got the Vittoria glue as I just happen to stumble upon them on a trip to an LBS) that had caused the gluing job to fail at the front wheel, but I do remember using just as much glue as I used on all the other wheels I have installed in the last couple of years adn I remember making sure, as usual that I had good base tape and rim coverage with the glue, I have a feeling it's the different base tape construction that might be causing a need for more glue to get proper adhesion. The Veloflex seems to have a coating over the base tape that all my other tubs do not have. Either the caoting was casing a different texture than usual that might require more glue than usual or maybe I just have to clean it real good maybe iwth some alcohol, so the glue will stick to it better.... I'll find out when I re-glue the two tires sometime this week, If I find time..... This time I'll use Continental glue that I already have and I'm more used to....
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Wish they still made the "Old Red" Gutta.
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Originally Posted by repechage
(Post 15644780)
It has been my experience that the modern adhesives (Vittoria, Continental Pasteli) behave much differently from the old Clement "red" and its period competition. Which is too bad. Much more work is required today, multiple layers on the rim and at least two on the tire if the tire has an uncoated base tape. No wonder why NOS tubes of Clement go for such silly amounts on ebay. I just did one, and darn if I won't have to peel it off and do it again, I get a "squishy" sound as the rear wheel rotates at one point. New tire mounted very true, and feels bonded butI don't like the noise.
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I do 2 layers on the base tape and one on the rim. Works fine for me (WFFM). I often leave a spont opposite the valve with less so I have a place to remove the tire. After a few runs the noise goes away. The last two rims I didn't put any glue on the base or the rim on a 3/4" or less section and have no noise at all. This is with the YJ tires.
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Originally Posted by repechage
(Post 15644780)
It has been my experience that the modern adhesives (Vittoria, Continental Pasteli) behave much differently from the old Clement "red" and its period competition. Which is too bad. Much more work is required today, multiple layers on the rim and at least two on the tire if the tire has an uncoated base tape. No wonder why NOS tubes of Clement go for such silly amounts on ebay. I just did one, and darn if I won't have to peel it off and do it again, I get a "squishy" sound as the rear wheel rotates at one point. New tire mounted very true, and feels bonded butI don't like the noise.
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Originally Posted by rootboy
(Post 15644543)
Whao, Gaucho. That is ugly. And, it seems odd for your location but maybe not, .... that looks like mold or mildew where the base tape glue was! Ye gods.....
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At sometime in the early days of this thread I was persuaded to try a better tyre than the Rallys and Gommitalias that I was familiar with and ended up getting a pair of 25mm Veloflex Arenbergs. I was immediately smitten by their ease of fitting, the evenness of their construction, their nice grip on rough surfaces and their plusher ride. Since then I've changed almost all my machines to the same tyres and the ones I haven't are because I'm waiting for the old tyres to wear out. I chose the Arenbergs because they were available in 25mm.
However, the one drawback is that they need pumping up every day. This is due, I have since learnt, to them having latex inner tubes. I sometimes pump them up twice in a day if it's a long day. Can anyone recommend a tyre that's as nice as the Arenberg, in a minimum of 25mm (up to 28mm would be fine) with a butyl inner tune which holds air longer? Preferably black but with tan walls would be okay. |
Does anyone know if Vittoria Pavé tubular tyres have butyl inner tubes. Can't find the info anywhere. Their website doesn't say...
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Originally Posted by Dawes-man
(Post 15907476)
Does anyone know if Vittoria Pavé tubular tyres have butyl inner tubes. Can't find the info anywhere. Their website doesn't say...
I'm using the Challenge Parigi-Roubaix 27 mm tubulars now, and if I ride every two days they need pumping that often to get up to 7.5 to 8 bars. |
Originally Posted by Dawes-man
(Post 15907443)
Can anyone recommend a tyre that's as nice as the Arenberg, in a minimum of 25mm (up to 28mm would be fine) with a butyl inner tune which holds air longer? Preferably black but with tan walls would be okay.
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Originally Posted by Road Fan
(Post 15907514)
I can't say, but maybe someone who uses them can say for how long they hold pressure? If when new they need to be pumped every day or two, they're latex. If it's considerably less frequent (a week to a few months), they're butyl.
I'm using the Challenge Parigi-Roubaix 27 mm tubulars now, and if I ride every two days they need pumping that often to get up to 7.5 to 8 bars. Let's see if the Pave has butyl. I'm not very keen on the green stripe but if it is butyl, I'd like to try it. |
Originally Posted by Dawes-man
(Post 15907443)
Can anyone recommend a tyre that's as nice as the Arenberg, in a minimum of 25mm (up to 28mm would be fine) with a butyl inner tune which holds air longer? Preferably black but with tan walls would be okay.
http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...th-butyl-tubes P.s. Note that some of the recommendations in the thread linked above were latex tubs. Tufu cross tires with a diamond tread may be your best option. I briefly used some 34mm Tufu's but I didn't have enough clearance with fenders so I took them off.. They worked fine--seated well and gave a soft ride--though maybe a little sluggish. I'm now using 32mm Dugast Pipistrello tubulars on the same bike--awesome, but very pricey, and latex tubes. |
I've never had tires hold air like my Tufo Diamonds, either tubular or clincher. They're great on hard pack and grass because that's what they're designed for. On the road, they're not so great. They ride more like cheap clinchers than tubulars. One of these days I want to try Tufo's road tires.
I think I recall Robbietunes posting that he races on Tufos. The Tufo tape is great for a dufus like me that can't glue on a tubular without getting glue all over the tire and myself. I think I'd go for blackwalls in this case because Tufo's tanwalls inexplicably tend to turn black over time. http://imageshack.us/a/img6/7611/7dv8.jpg |
Originally Posted by Dawes-man
(Post 15908421)
Let's see if the Pave has butyl. I'm not very keen on the green stripe but if it is butyl, I'd like to try it.
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That's a good question!
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Originally Posted by gaucho777
(Post 15908736)
Dawes-man, I sympathize with your quest for a wide, good-quality, butyl tubular:
http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...th-butyl-tubes P.s. Note that some of the recommendations in the thread linked above were latex tubs. Tufu cross tires with a diamond tread may be your best option. |
Originally Posted by rootboy
(Post 15910183)
Only asking because I'm not sure but, does if follow that with butyl tubes one would lose a certain amount of the "feel" of good tubulars?
Perhaps even if they made a lovely tyre with lots of feel but a butyl inner it might not sell in enough numbers to make it worthwhile. Hence butyl is consigned to cheaper tyres. I'm sure there is a long list of things that make a tyre great. I very much doubt I could tell the difference between an Arenberg with a latex inner and the same tyre, built in exactly the same way, but with a butyl inner but I guess a lot of pros could. |
Just had a thought: www.tirealert.com. For ~$20 (discounts for multiple tires) they can replace the latex tubes with butyl tubes and add new base tape. I just spoke with someone over there who confirmed wide tubulars are not an issue (they do repair cross tire, too, after all; they can also repair with latex if the customer prefers). So, if you are willing to add $20 to the cost of a tire, the options are about as limited as latex tubulars. If I get a flat on my 32mm Dugasts, this is what I'm going to do. Disclaimer: I have no prior experience with tire alert, but it's something I've considered (actually, I probably heard about it 15 pages or so ago on this thread).
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Originally Posted by Dawes-man
(Post 15910339)
I think it's more a case of those who put the effort into making nice tyres are only interested in using latex, the lightest option available, as that optimises rolling and is what people who spend that much expect.
Perhaps even if they made a lovely tyre with lots of feel but a butyl inner it might not sell in enough numbers to make it worthwhile. Hence butyl is consigned to cheaper tyres. I'm sure there is a long list of things that make a tyre great. I very much doubt I could tell the difference between an Arenberg with a latex inner and the same tyre, built in exactly the same way, but with a butyl inner but I guess a lot of pros could. |
I'm sure I could not tell the difference either. Not like the difference between good tubulars and my clinchers, say.
I've also heard, way back when, that thin latex adds to the supple feel of good tires, but I'll wager most of it is in the casing and sidewall construction. Like the difference between a really good silk tire and a so-so cotton tire. |
Originally Posted by Road Fan
(Post 15911143)
I can't say I've experienced it, but latex tubes are said to give a more supple ride. I own and use some latex tires, but I'm not sure they're great just because of the latex.
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Originally Posted by gaucho777
(Post 15910638)
Just had a thought: www.tirealert.com. For ~$20 (discounts for multiple tires) they can replace the latex tubes with butyl tubes and add new base tape. I just spoke with someone over there who confirmed wide tubulars are not an issue (they do repair cross tire, too, after all; they can also repair with latex if the customer prefers). So, if you are willing to add $20 to the cost of a tire, the options are about as limited as latex tubulars. If I get a flat on my 32mm Dugasts, this is what I'm going to do. Disclaimer: I have no prior experience with tire alert, but it's something I've considered (actually, I probably heard about it 15 pages or so ago on this thread).
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