View Single Post
Old 08-15-22, 07:49 PM
  #20  
WizardOfBoz
Generally bewildered
 
WizardOfBoz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Eastern PA, USA
Posts: 3,037

Bikes: 2014 Trek Domane 6.9, 1999 LeMond Zurich, 1978 Schwinn Superior

Mentioned: 20 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1152 Post(s)
Liked 341 Times in 251 Posts
Originally Posted by enargins
I'm not doubting that this is what may have happened. I'm only questioning why, if the tire slid off the rim, allowing the tire to balloon out and pop, that I didn't see it do it, since I was watching the tire the entire time. (The tire was off the bike in the back of my minivan while being inflated, and I was sitting next to it, holding it.)
Granted, I was only looking at one side of the tire. But that was the side of the tire which came off the rim. So if the tire came off the rim first, allowing the tube to balloon out, it seems I would have seen it, since I was looking at the tire the whole time, no?
Also (and, again, not arguing, just trying to understand): if the tube ballooned out and then popped, then wouldn't that have been where the tear was, where the ballooning happened? But the tear was along the seam, at the very outside of the tube, not on the side of the tube.
Thanks!
That is weird that you didn't see it. I look at any element of the tire that has a constant diameter and depressure if I see even a slight lack of concentricity. That said, If the thing starts sliding it happens fast. I have to say that when I rebuilt the "hookless" Weinmann rims on my Schwinn Superior I think it took me 1/2 hour of very nervous fill and check, fill and check.

Glad you weren't hurt. Good luck
WizardOfBoz is offline