Tubeless road experiences
#51
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Your choice. I'm just telling you how it can work with minimal effort. You actually need more "expertise" to change a tube than you do to use a Dynaplug. It's just that many riders are still clueless about tubeless. I came to it from mountain biking where tubeless is the norm. I do a lot of big century Sportives and there are always plenty of guys stopped at the roadside with wheels off changing tubes. I've never once had to do that with a good tubeless setup. But each to their own.
Be honest here. How many times have you really seen someone struggle to plug a hole in a tubeless tyre? Do you seriously think people would run tubeless if it was such a massive pita? For sure you can make it hard work with the wrong gear and no idea, but it's not inherently difficult.
Be honest here. How many times have you really seen someone struggle to plug a hole in a tubeless tyre? Do you seriously think people would run tubeless if it was such a massive pita? For sure you can make it hard work with the wrong gear and no idea, but it's not inherently difficult.
#52
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Yeah, I know the conditions were extreme, but weren't all those guys getting flat tires during Paris-Roubaix this weekend running tubeless?
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#53
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It’s only a few data points, but on my club ride today we went through an area full of potholes. There were two flats among 9 riders. The flats happened to the only 2 riders running tubeless. They both struggled to fix their flats and ultimately both failed despite trying a plug and tubes. There might have been rim or major tire damage, along with some user error.
That said, I am inclined to not endorse road tubeless on road tires. Gravel or CX, sure.
That said, I am inclined to not endorse road tubeless on road tires. Gravel or CX, sure.
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For those who choose to ride tubeless. The new Silca Ultimate Sealant is absolutely amazing. I am riding Schwalbe G One Speed 30 mm tires at 65PSI. Hit a piece of glass this weekend and the cut had to be 1/4 inch long. Sealed after about 5 revolutions and made it home without adding air. The tire was toast and lost some sealant but the leak sealing was astounding.
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There's no need to convince yourself tubeless is inferior to your tubed setup. Just ride and don't worry about threads asking about tubeless experience when you clearly don't have any.
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I'm sure some of them were. I've had 1 flat in 3 years riding tubeless road so it doesn't matter. When I was riding with tubes I was getting flats every few weeks on our local roads. It's the main reason I prefer tubeless.
There's no need to convince yourself tubeless is inferior to your tubed setup. Just ride and don't worry about threads asking about tubeless experience when you clearly don't have any.
There's no need to convince yourself tubeless is inferior to your tubed setup. Just ride and don't worry about threads asking about tubeless experience when you clearly don't have any.
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Observing and noting other riders’ experience is no less valuable than asking someone on this forum about their experience.
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Along these lines, I *know* that I've had punctures on team rides, though I've never had a flat in four years of riding with them. If I were to get a flat tonight, though, I can guarantee you that some of the old school guys would harp on me about how tubeless is more trouble than it's worth, because the failure would feed in to their preconceived bias and because they're simply unaware of the flats that I've avoided over the years.
With tubeless, I'll happily plug, or even pop in a tube, once every year or two, because I *know* that I used to get flats every four weeks or so. This trade-off is readily apparent to me, but it would mean little to the crew if they happened to be around for a bad episode.
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You're doing a good job of discounting anything that doesn't support your position. Observation of tubeless tire failures does not give a skewed perspective, any more than observation of tubed tire failures gives a skewed perspective. They both provide information.
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We do have to consider confirmation bias which has a tendency to magnify in observational situations. My experience has been very positive overall and would never consider going back to tubed tires for regular road riding, long-distance touring and of course gravel. As technology progresses rapidly in this space we can only expect the advantage to increase over time. As stated previously the new sealant by Silca is transformative, it is that good.
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If you're primarily after a more supple ride and lower pressures, the first thing I'd do is lower your pressure - you're running a little high for 28s and your weight, IMO. Start there, then reassess.
As far tubeless, I think that it's a great solution if you get a fair number of flats. If I didn't need the benefit of flat protection, though, I don't think that I'd take on the extra maintenance just to lower pressure a handful of PSI.
As far tubeless, I think that it's a great solution if you get a fair number of flats. If I didn't need the benefit of flat protection, though, I don't think that I'd take on the extra maintenance just to lower pressure a handful of PSI.
As far as providing information, sure, but this is my main point: information is nothing without context. An 10-minute hassle on the side of the road is bad. An 10-minute hassle on the side of the road that otherwise eliminates 10-15 7-minute hassles is something that many would find to be a pretty fair trade-off.
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We do have to consider confirmation bias which has a tendency to magnify in observational situations. My experience has been very positive overall and would never consider going back to tubed tires for regular road riding, long-distance touring and of course gravel. As technology progresses rapidly in this space we can only expect the advantage to increase over time. As stated previously the new sealant by Silca is transformative, it is that good.
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#64
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But what does that have to do with the price of tea in China? I'm not arguing that tubes suck because I've had to wait around for several teammates to fix flats over the years. I'm not arguing that people should go tubeless because my flat frequency with tubes was horrendous. I'm saying that people can only judge for themselves whether or not a trade-off is a good one, because only they know what's on both sides of the scale.
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But what does that have to do with the price of tea in China? I'm not arguing that tubes suck because I've had to wait around for several teammates to fix flats over the years. I'm not arguing that people should go tubeless because my flat frequency with tubes was horrendous. I'm saying that people can only judge for themselves whether or not a trade-off is a good one, because only they know what's on both sides of the scale.
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Your logic continues to be flawed because a vast majority of those who ride tubeless have switched over from regular tubed tires and thus can be objective regarding which they prefer. For some they preferred tubed and went back for a varity of reasons however a vast majority stayed with tubeless because they thought it was preferable. The more recent the convert the more likely a positive experience because of the rapidly evolving technology.
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I'm still at a loss as to where you're going with this. Maybe you could help me by pointing out where I argued any point based on the observation of tubed failures of others.
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Those that have never meaningfully used tubeless
Those that tried road tubeless early on and still have the foul taste of Stan's lingering in their mouth and callouses from super tight rim/tire combos
Those that never should have went tubeless in the first place, because they really didn't get flats regularly enough to warrant it
Those that tried road tubeless early on and still have the foul taste of Stan's lingering in their mouth and callouses from super tight rim/tire combos
Those that never should have went tubeless in the first place, because they really didn't get flats regularly enough to warrant it
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If I observe a failure of tubeless tires, it is useful information. If I observe a failure of tubed tires, it is useful information. You discounted the former, claiming it gives a skewed perspective. If that's true, then you also have to discount the latter as skewed. But, why would anyone ignore the observed shortcomings of either?
#71
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When discounting direct evidence, because the observer didn't ride the bike himself and when limping home at 25 psi doesn't count as flatting, TL is a sure fire winner. - Talk about stacking the deck! haha :-)
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#72
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My comment was very simple:
If I observe a failure of tubeless tires, it is useful information. If I observe a failure of tubed tires, it is useful information. You discounted the former, claiming it gives a skewed perspective. If that's true, then you also have to discount the latter as skewed. But, why would anyone ignore the observed shortcomings of either?
If I observe a failure of tubeless tires, it is useful information. If I observe a failure of tubed tires, it is useful information. You discounted the former, claiming it gives a skewed perspective. If that's true, then you also have to discount the latter as skewed. But, why would anyone ignore the observed shortcomings of either?
#73
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to the OP: Bad
Two combos (forget which tire/rim) that didn't seat even with sealant and a CO2 shot. I did have one combo work a while back but it was too hard to install so I had the shop do it. I have had many combos work on MTB that all seated and sealed with a floor pump. MTB has more ROI as well - lower pressures, more chance of punctures. Way more ROI considering how low the "I" is.
I ride in San Diego (mostly coastal) where goatheads and that sort of thing aren't a big problem. If I did and/or rode my road bikes off pavement more, I would consider tubeless. For me it's a (difficult) solution looking for a problem - I rarely flat
Two combos (forget which tire/rim) that didn't seat even with sealant and a CO2 shot. I did have one combo work a while back but it was too hard to install so I had the shop do it. I have had many combos work on MTB that all seated and sealed with a floor pump. MTB has more ROI as well - lower pressures, more chance of punctures. Way more ROI considering how low the "I" is.
I ride in San Diego (mostly coastal) where goatheads and that sort of thing aren't a big problem. If I did and/or rode my road bikes off pavement more, I would consider tubeless. For me it's a (difficult) solution looking for a problem - I rarely flat
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#74
Senior Member
Yup. Most of those that staunchly argue against tubeless can fall in to one or more of the following categories:
Those that have never meaningfully used tubeless
Those that tried road tubeless early on and still have the foul taste of Stan's lingering in their mouth and callouses from super tight rim/tire combos
Those that never should have went tubeless in the first place, because they really didn't get flats regularly enough to warrant it
Those that tried road tubeless early on and still have the foul taste of Stan's lingering in their mouth and callouses from super tight rim/tire combos
Those that never should have went tubeless in the first place, because they really didn't get flats regularly enough to warrant it

Overall, I am not saying that tubeless is bad as a principle (on the contrary), but I believe this technology for road bikes still needs to improve a lot. It looks as a "shame" for many to go back to older technology (tubed), but I did it for the time being with my 23mm and I have no regrets - I saved a lot of maintenance time and some money. I'm looking forward to see further technological improvements, before I come back.
#75
Full Member
I don't do a ton of road riding, but where I live the shoulders and low traffic roads are jam packed with debris, which was causing a puncture like every other ride even on tires with a puncture belt. Going from 25c tires at 90-95 psi to tubeless 28c at 60-65 (155 pound rider) made a HUGE difference in comfort on my alloy Madone 2.1 too, and no more punctures. Interestingly, I was worried about sealant in the smaller volume 28c tires (with less sealant too) compared to the 42c tires on my gravel bike, and 2.2" on my MTB drying out a lot faster, but it actually seems to be the opposite. Since I don't do a ton of road rides, the sealant lasting 6+ months if I just keep the tires inflated and spin them a few times a month at least put the last argument against to bed.
A hookless, tubeless setup for road is something I am still lukewarm about though.
A hookless, tubeless setup for road is something I am still lukewarm about though.