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-   -   Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube? (http://www.cyclebanter.com/showthread.php?t=254631)

Joerg[_2_] August 31st 17 07:55 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/

AMuzi August 31st 17 08:21 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On 8/31/2017 1:55 PM, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long
story short I will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare
tires. Wore out in less than 1200mi and then weakened which
is just unacceptable. So thumbs down from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They
must be laid in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause
a 700c 25mm tire at 110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop
.. whop every time the overlap comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded)
thorn-resistant tube, slit it open on the inside and slide
it over the real thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same
thickness all around but now the thickness tapers off
towards the sidewalls. That's where they fail. Same for
Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday because those
things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not
matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers
"inflate" their vehicle tires with some sort of hardening
sealant (Silicone? Construction foam?) that makes the tires
bullet-proof. What material is it and how do they get it in
there thoroughly enough? Would it be good for a couple of
thousand miles?


Not anything new:
http://www.americanindustrialtire.com/foamfilled.htm

See your local skid-steer equipment dealer

--
Andrew Muzi
www.yellowjersey.org/
Open every day since 1 April, 1971



Sir Ridesalot August 31st 17 09:19 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thursday, August 31, 2017 at 2:55:06 PM UTC-4, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/


Fill tubes with wet concrete, allow to hardern = no more flats. VBEG LOL

Cheers

JBeattie August 31st 17 09:23 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thursday, August 31, 2017 at 12:20:53 PM UTC-7, AMuzi wrote:
On 8/31/2017 1:55 PM, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long
story short I will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare
tires. Wore out in less than 1200mi and then weakened which
is just unacceptable. So thumbs down from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They
must be laid in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause
a 700c 25mm tire at 110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop
.. whop every time the overlap comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded)
thorn-resistant tube, slit it open on the inside and slide
it over the real thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same
thickness all around but now the thickness tapers off
towards the sidewalls. That's where they fail. Same for
Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday because those
things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not
matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers
"inflate" their vehicle tires with some sort of hardening
sealant (Silicone? Construction foam?) that makes the tires
bullet-proof. What material is it and how do they get it in
there thoroughly enough? Would it be good for a couple of
thousand miles?


Not anything new:
http://www.americanindustrialtire.com/foamfilled.htm

See your local skid-steer equipment dealer


He should get the Nashbar Conestoga wheels: http://galleryplus.ebayimg.com/ws/we...4778_1_0_1.jpg They come with a custom rock for roadside repairs. Just type in the discount code ROCK4U.

-- Jay Beattie.



[email protected] August 31st 17 10:49 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thursday, August 31, 2017 at 11:55:06 AM UTC-7, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?


As usual - no. Weight from Mr. Tuffy's is insignificant. Construction foam would cause a tire to fail almost immediately. First by breaking it up into chunks and then collapsing it.

There is tubeless tires and sealant but these will not handle cuts or tears in the sidewalls of fat tires. If you can get the tube type from which you can extract the presta fitting then you can put in large amounts of sealant into the tube. When using this sealant you have to always stop or park the bike with the fill on the bottom of the wheel.

All presta valves used to screw out but the times I've tried it recently was on cheap tubes and they were somehow fixed inside the nozzle.

[email protected] August 31st 17 10:53 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thursday, August 31, 2017 at 12:20:53 PM UTC-7, AMuzi wrote:
On 8/31/2017 1:55 PM, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long
story short I will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare
tires. Wore out in less than 1200mi and then weakened which
is just unacceptable. So thumbs down from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They
must be laid in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause
a 700c 25mm tire at 110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop
.. whop every time the overlap comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded)
thorn-resistant tube, slit it open on the inside and slide
it over the real thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same
thickness all around but now the thickness tapers off
towards the sidewalls. That's where they fail. Same for
Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday because those
things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not
matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers
"inflate" their vehicle tires with some sort of hardening
sealant (Silicone? Construction foam?) that makes the tires
bullet-proof. What material is it and how do they get it in
there thoroughly enough? Would it be good for a couple of
thousand miles?


Not anything new:
http://www.americanindustrialtire.com/foamfilled.htm

See your local skid-steer equipment dealer

--
Andrew Muzi
www.yellowjersey.org/
Open every day since 1 April, 1971


Never saw that stuff before. What I did see was tires willed with polyurethane foam that hardened. Pretty screwed up.

This stuff looks like it will solve Joerg's problem. Though it ain't for road tires.

Doug Landau September 1st 17 01:38 AM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thursday, August 31, 2017 at 11:55:06 AM UTC-7, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?


Those who are serious about not getting flats make their own mr tuffys from old tires



Frank Krygowski[_4_] September 1st 17 01:57 AM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On 8/31/2017 2:55 PM, Joerg wrote:
Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA
patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?

Have you tried these? https://www.schwalbetires.com/flat-less

No personal experience, but I remembered seeing the ad somewhere.

--
- Frank Krygowski

John B.[_3_] September 1st 17 02:30 AM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
On Thu, 31 Aug 2017 11:55:10 -0700, Joerg
wrote:

Yesterday I had another two (!) sidewall punctures. Long story short I
will definitely not recommend CST Conquistare tires. Wore out in less
than 1200mi and then weakened which is just unacceptable. So thumbs down
from me.

This brings up two questions:

1. The Mr.Tuffy orange liners for 700c narrow tires. They must be laid
in with a wee overlap. Will that overlap cause a 700c 25mm tire at
110psi to run bumpy? Like whop .. whop .. whop every time the overlap
comes around?

2. What about taking a second (otherwise discarded) thorn-resistant
tube, slit it open on the inside and slide it over the real
thorn-resistant as a 2nd layer?

The problem is that Kenda seems to have discontinued selling
thorn-resistant tubes with good and most of all same thickness all
around but now the thickness tapers off towards the sidewalls. That's
where they fail. Same for Sunlite which I had to re-order yesterday
because those things are essentially unfixable with those thin REMA patches.

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?


I don't know about smugglers but yes you can buy foam to use in tires.
See
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgv4UiDQa74
http://www.accellatirefill.com/

and I assume other sites.
--
Cheers,

John B.


Doc O'Leary[_21_] September 1st 17 04:26 PM

Mr.Tuffy liner for road bikes ok? Or 2nd tube?
 
For your reference, records indicate that
Joerg wrote:

Any words of wisdom? As usual, weight absolutely does not matter.

In case anyone knows: I read somewhere that smugglers "inflate" their
vehicle tires with some sort of hardening sealant (Silicone?
Construction foam?) that makes the tires bullet-proof. What material is
it and how do they get it in there thoroughly enough? Would it be good
for a couple of thousand miles?


Well, if weight really isn’t an issue, people do already make airless/
air-free bicycle tires. Foam rubber of varying density to simulate
different air pressures. I had a friend who considered them some years
back, but they *really* are not light.

--
"Also . . . I can kill you with my brain."
River Tam, Trash, Firefly




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