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Originally Posted by DiabloScott
(Post 21406673)
Maybe try TUBULARS.
😏 |
Originally Posted by game_player_s
(Post 21407587)
Your comment had me puzzled, and I'm like, "what am I missing?". Scrolled back through much earlier posts in this thread and you know, prior to browsing through the thread a bit more, well I honestly thought tubular tires were the floppy, non-wire bead, type.. But now I'm looking through this, and can safely attest that I have never seen one of these funky looking tire-tube combo "tubular tire" affairs in person in my entire life.
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Originally Posted by Wildwood
(Post 21407703)
Hey, no charge for the lesson!
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Originally Posted by DiabloScott
(Post 21408967)
Yeah, I’ve dealt with bike shop employees who were unfamiliar with tubulars too.
I have to laugh. True story - Was in a rather large, familiar bike shop a few months back and noticed a new poster w/ a lot of writing on the walls (at eye level) in several spots - two in the tire section. It was a detailed poster showing (almost) all the tire sizes and the various nomenclatures for each. Only a couple of images for reference. Upon checking out I said to the store-manager-looking-guy, "Thanks for trying to keep all us dumb customers clear about the tire sizes we need?" He replied, "Training tool for new employees!" He paused, then mumbled audibly, "and translation guide for the experienced ones." I could only chuckle and reply, "me too, thankfully tubulars are one diameter". Then he said, "We need a bigger one (chart) for wheels and all brake combos". |
I had to put my clincher wheels on the vintage bike last week after this terminal tire cut. I've got a half-dozen nice tubulars hanging in the garage but I'm about ready to switch to my summer bike and hang this one up for the season.
Latex tube, slow leak, Stan's didn't stop it. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/RX...I=w768-h932-no |
Last year I spotted a set of mid-90s Mavic Cosmic wheels on CL (8-10 speed freehub). While not vintage they'd make a nice upgrade for my '93 R500 Cannondale and the price was less than $100. I couldn't tell from the picture as to whether they were clinchers or tubulars, so I asked in an email, "Are the rims for clincher tires or tubular tires?" The answer came back, "I used these on my Tri-Bike and they are tubulars."
So I drove the 1.5 hours to pick them up, excited that I found such a nice set of modern tubular wheels for my C-Dale! As soon as the seller brought them out from the garage, and without me even holding them, I said, politely, "Wow! Those are nice looking wheels, but those are clincher rims with clincher tires." The owner, who was a professor at a nearby state university, assured me, "Oh, no! This is a tubular wheelset. One of the best you could buy in the 90s!" Well, I bought them anyway. For $75 I felt it was a good purchase. I departed without deflating the tire to reveal the bead nor did I pull up an image of tubular on my phone. The good professor continues to live in his tubular ignorance! :innocent: |
Originally Posted by pastorbobnlnh
(Post 21410738)
The good professor continues to live in his tubular ignorance! :innocent:
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I loved the "TUBES" Smash or Trash Album circa 82 maybe........
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Originally Posted by Wildwood
(Post 21401724)
do you pre-stretch your tubulars on a rim? or the barefooted hold to the floor and gently stretch by pulling up with your hands, a couple of times?
I have more difficulty with clinchers and not pinching the tube. This little tool is super handy |
Originally Posted by Johno59
(Post 21434263)
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...72eb63608.jpeg
This little tool is super handy |
Originally Posted by pastorbobnlnh
(Post 21410738)
Last year I spotted a set of mid-90s Mavic Cosmic wheels on CL (8-10 speed freehub). While not vintage they'd make a nice upgrade for my '93 R500 Cannondale and the price was less than $100. I couldn't tell from the picture as to whether they were clinchers or tubulars, so I asked in an email, "Are the rims for clincher tires or tubular tires?" The answer came back, "I used these on my Tri-Bike and they are tubulars."
So I drove the 1.5 hours to pick them up, excited that I found such a nice set of modern tubular wheels for my C-Dale! As soon as the seller brought them out from the garage, and without me even holding them, I said, politely, "Wow! Those are nice looking wheels, but those are clincher rims with clincher tires." The owner, who was a professor at a nearby state university, assured me, "Oh, no! This is a tubular wheelset. One of the best you could buy in the 90s!" Well, I bought them anyway. For $75 I felt it was a good purchase. I departed without deflating the tire to reveal the bead nor did I pull up an image of tubular on my phone. The good professor continues to live in his tubular ignorance! :innocent: |
Originally Posted by due ruote
(Post 21439250)
He probably thought you were asking whether or not they were tubeless.
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Originally Posted by Johno59
(Post 21434263)
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...72eb63608.jpeg
This little tool is super handy this is a clincher tire tool, another very good reason for tubulars!!! :) |
Originally Posted by Wildwood
(Post 21439532)
If I can't fit or remove a tire with my hands and a basic lever, then that tire or rim will be gone before the bike's next ride. I can't be fished into having a tool for every non-toleranced component.
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I can buy into everything you say - but to what good purpose? Making ill-fitting combinations of tires& rims fit? Balderdash!!! :mad:
Find me a proper fitting tire for this rim/wheelset. Please! A sturdy, touring rim. Maybe this 700c DOES fit 27” tires. Haven’t tried that. https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...5258925cc.jpeg |
Originally Posted by Wildwood
(Post 21439794)
I can buy into everything you say - but to what good purpose? Making ill-fitting combinations of tires& rims fit? Balderdash!!! :mad:
Find me a proper fitting tire for this rim/wheelset. Please! A sturdy, touring rim. Maybe this 700c DOES fit 27” tires. Haven’t tried that. https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...5258925cc.jpeg |
Originally Posted by squirtdad
(Post 21440909)
had those rims on the torpado i used to have..... diidn't have any problems with 700c tires.....don't remember brand/model..... but I have had tires that took a tire jack to get on.....if that happens, let them sit for a few days and then do a simulated flat on the road and if I can't get them off easily, then put differnt tires on
...but, but, but..... this is the Totally Tubular thread. ;) :thumb: I see no further point in clincher problem-fixing with kludge (but effective) solutions. :D |
Originally Posted by Wildwood
(Post 21440959)
...but, but, but.....
this is the Totally Tubular thread. ;) :thumb: . :D BTW, tubulars fit just fine on 700c clincher rims for stretching purposes. I don't keep my worn out tubular rims but I always have a spare clincher wheel hanging from the rafters for stretching tubulars, and clinchers, and for QC on patched tubes. |
Originally Posted by DiabloScott
(Post 21442616)
BTW, tubulars fit just fine on 700c clincher rims for stretching purposes.
Tubulars fit on a 700c clincher rim well enough to ride when the situation requires it. I mentioned this in a different thread (I think) a few years ago, but I'll mention it again. I was commuting home one afternoon and came upon another cyclist stopped with a flat on the rear. He was trying to flag down a car but it was a bad location where, to put it mildly, ain't nobody gonna' stop there. He had no spare or patch kit, apparently had considered neither the possibility of a flat nor many of the other practicalities of riding. He was hoping to get to a bike shop just a few miles away, an easy ride and mostly significantly downhill. I had a spare tubular so I mounted in on his clincher rim, pumped it up to a reasonable pressure, warned him not to corner or brake too hard, and followed him to the bike shop where he gave me my tire back. Since then I've usually carried a patch kit on my tubular-tired bikes. It's kinda' like carrying a flashlight on a sunny day but you never know when you might meet someone who's still in the dark. |
Originally Posted by jimmuller
(Post 21443241)
Good point, never tried it though because I've always had a spare tubular rim sitting around.
Tubulars fit on a 700c clincher rim well enough to ride when the situation requires it. I mentioned this in a different thread (I think) a few years ago, but I'll mention it again. I was commuting home one afternoon and came upon another cyclist stopped with a flat on the rear. He was trying to flag down a car but it was a bad location where, to put it mildly, ain't nobody gonna' stop there. He had no spare or patch kit, apparently had considered neither the possibility of a flat nor many of the other practicalities of riding. He was hoping to get to a bike shop just a few miles away, an easy ride and mostly significantly downhill. I had a spare tubular so I mounted in on his clincher rim, pumped it up to a reasonable pressure, warned him not to corner or brake too hard, and followed him to the bike shop where he gave me my tire back. Since then I've usually carried a patch kit on my tubular-tired bikes. It's kinda' like carrying a flashlight on a sunny day but you never know when you might meet someone who's still in the dark. Cheers |
Originally Posted by Miele Man
(Post 21443998)
I've also used a tubular tire on a clincher rim in an emergency to get me to a bicycle shop. I've done that when the clincher tire was too badly damaged to use safely even with a boot.
Cheers |
Originally Posted by jimmuller
(Post 21444093)
Great! But why were you carrying a tubular tire on a bike with clincher wheels? This a story worth telling, I am sure.
When I rode the bike with the tubular tire on the clincher rim to the bike shop the guys working there were quite surprised that it was able to be done. Someone on these forums said that one should watch for chafing of the tubular tire by the rim of a clincher wheel if riding a tubular tire for any great distance. I've never had any problems with the distances I've used. This using a tubular tire on a clincher rim came about one day when I went to ride my bicycle and discovered a very large bulge in the tire due to having it a wide gap in the road the day before and severely damaging the clincher tire on it. That tire was ready to blow so in desperation I tried putting an old spare tubular tire i had here on it. It worked and I was able to ride to the bike shop and get a new tire. Cheers |
All this "clincher" diversion has diluted "totally tubular" with confusing and distracting concepts which are infecting the health of this thread with a deadly virus. :eek:
Don't you all know that we are in a pandemic--- and clinchers and tubulars MUST social distance from each other by at least two meters!?! (keeping this metric) :p Thus a tubular cannot be mounted on a clincher! :foo: The next thing someone will suggest that if clinchers are scrubbed with antiseptic and bathed in powerful UV light they can be installed on tubular rims. :innocent: |
Here's some stuff that can hopefully act as "mind bleach" against all that clincher nonsense.
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...1d2b08bbd5.jpg https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...2ec51843a9.jpg https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...24656cef3a.jpg https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...ec30f27435.jpg https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...ed72446826.jpg https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...4eca4dfe87.jpg https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...2df705252d.jpg |
Wow a lot of that applies today...the mounting method is almost identical to what is listed on yellow jersey
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