Tubeless Tire Losing Pressure Overnight
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Tubeless Tire Losing Pressure Overnight
I have a new-ish (about a month old) bike that came with tubeless tires (Stan's Grail Team rims and Schwalbe G-One 700x35 tires). I'm near the weight limit for the bike/tire (250lbs.) so I keep them at about 65psi (sidewall says max 70). Every day when I go on my first ride I check the pressure, and they're almost always down to 40psi. Is that a sign of something wrong, or normal for tubeless? I don't mind checking them every morning and airing up when needed, but I'd hate for them to lose air when I was on a ride.
Thanks.
-Brett
Thanks.
-Brett
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Check them in a tub or sink to see if you can identify the source of the leak or failure to seal. Valves and rim tape are good possibilities. Properly seated and sealed, tubeless shouldn't lose much air at all overnight.
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I’ve had some of my tubeless tires act similarly. As long as they hold air for a 2-3 hour ride, I usually tolerate it. It’s when they go completely flat overnight that I start over, figure out what’s wrong, and get them sealed better.
Putting it in water, you might find it’s leaking around the stem. In that case it’s easy to assume the nut needs to be tighter, but that’s not always the case. I find it sometimes helps to let the air out, loosen the nut, wiggle the stem around a little or twist it to a new position (unless it’s the kind with a spacer shaped to match the rim contour), and then tighten the nut again—just snug. Not too tight!
Of course, this all assumes you have enough sealant inside and it’s not dried up. Have you checked that?
Putting it in water, you might find it’s leaking around the stem. In that case it’s easy to assume the nut needs to be tighter, but that’s not always the case. I find it sometimes helps to let the air out, loosen the nut, wiggle the stem around a little or twist it to a new position (unless it’s the kind with a spacer shaped to match the rim contour), and then tighten the nut again—just snug. Not too tight!
Of course, this all assumes you have enough sealant inside and it’s not dried up. Have you checked that?
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I hate the hassle of setting them up initially, and how they’re sometimes kind of finicky after that.
I’ve been converting most of my bikes to them because of one benefit: self-sealing punctures. We have lots of goat head thorns where I live. Number of flats caused by them formerly: dozens. Number of flats caused by thorns in any/all my tubeless tires: zero.
I’ve been converting most of my bikes to them because of one benefit: self-sealing punctures. We have lots of goat head thorns where I live. Number of flats caused by them formerly: dozens. Number of flats caused by thorns in any/all my tubeless tires: zero.
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Not to insult your intelligence, but did you convert them to tubeless? I'm pretty sure all new bikes with tubeless tires come shipped with tubes.
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Thanks everyone for the replies. @Lazyass: Good point! I did not actually check to see if the tires were in fact running tubeless, just assumed they were as the literature around the bike talked that feature up. The first time I aired them up though I'm pretty sure I got a little bit of sealant spray out of the valve.
I'll try the water test.
-Brett
I'll try the water test.
-Brett
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Thanks everyone for the replies. @Lazyass: Good point! I did not actually check to see if the tires were in fact running tubeless, just assumed they were as the literature around the bike talked that feature up. The first time I aired them up though I'm pretty sure I got a little bit of sealant spray out of the valve.
I'll try the water test.
-Brett
I'll try the water test.
-Brett