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#91
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On 2017-01-04 22:55, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Wed, 04 Jan 2017 11:59:28 -0800, Joerg wrote: Try these: https://www.amazon.com/Sunlite-Thorn.../dp/B000BMT2TM I never looked back. Reviews are mixed and sometimes they do have poor valve attachment. Also, some are thick only towards the running surface and that is less protecting than thick all around. Thanks. I should probably get something like that instead of the cheap tubes that I've been buying. Note that the cheap tubes seem to leak without any riding. I've built wheels, applied pressure, and watched the pressure drop slowly over a period of several days. The leaks are small, difficult to find, tricky to plug without a patch, and very irritating. Yup. Standard bicycle tubes are usually junk. Would you accept it if you had to pump up the tires of your car every two weeks? Yet most cyclists think this is "normal". Incidentally, I use mostly Presta valves: https://www.amazon.com/Sunlite-Thorn-Resistant-Presta-Valve/dp/B000AO9ZX4/ They come in both. Often also long or short stem. So ask before buying in order to be able to return if not as promised. As Forest Gump said, "Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you gonna get". I rarely return anything unless its dead on arrival or they shipped me the wrong stuff. If something was clearly overpromised I generally return it. It is the only way for manufacturers to learn to be honest. ... I'll probably just buy one set tubes and see what happens. $14/ea for 27x1.25. Grumble... It is so worth it. I can just walk into our garage, pick the most suitable bike for the ride, hop on, and ride. No pumping up the tires first. While riding I can be assured that the spare tube and patch kits will most likely only be needed for other riders. The thicker a tube the better it usually is. If it means that I don't have to pump up the tires every time I go for a ride, I'll pay the price. Do it. You won't look back. However, you bike will now weigh around two pounds more and the wheels will have a much higher rotating mass. Your average speed might also drop by an mph. A small price to pay for the huge increase in likelihood to arrive on time instead of sitting on the side of the road in 40F weather fixing a flat. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
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#93
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On 2017-01-05 11:27, AMuzi wrote:
On 1/5/2017 10:47 AM, wrote: On Thursday, January 5, 2017 at 8:31:22 AM UTC-8, AMuzi wrote: On 1/5/2017 9:59 AM, Joerg wrote: On 2017-01-05 07:34, wrote: On Wednesday, January 4, 2017 at 8:47:35 PM UTC-8, Phil Lee wrote: Joerg considered Wed, 04 Jan 2017 07:38:10 -0800 the perfect time to write: On 2017-01-04 01:19, Tosspot wrote: On 04/01/17 01:04, Joerg wrote: Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. UK, but must be available all over http://www.tyre-equipment.co.uk/acat...r-Patches.html Go up to 180mmx95mm and are less than a UKP per patch. Thanks! Time for a trip to the autoparts store since there is http://www.vipal-usa.com/repair_line_e.html Looks like a Brazilian company. The 30mm patches are 13 squids per 100! Surely, surely even Joerg can't get through that amount that fast! I hardly get flats but when I do they are hardcore. Typically caused by those notorious #%&^!! flimsy side walls of bicycle tires. Which is also why I am always on the lookout for tires with better side walls. For the MTB I found that Asian ones do better in that domain but haven't found any yet for the road bike. Will try CST, their Conquistare tires look promising but I could not find reviews. Heavier tires are generally better and finally those appeared for 29". For 700c it's still slim pickens. You do know that 29" ARE 700c, both using a bead seat diameter of 622mm? It's just that one description is used for MTB and the other for road use. I have been told that many times. But my CX bike feels absolutely NOTHING like the 29er did. On that the wheels felt massive and heavy. On the CX bike they are nothing of the sort. Phil should try to mount a 29" Intense Trail Taker tire or similar on a 700c road bike. Then it would quickly sink in why this will never work :-) Joerg, don't be ridiculous. Phil Lee was correct. A 559mm 26x2.3 tire will mount on the rim but can't possibly fit inside the frame or fork of a Bridgestone CB1. So what? A perfectly common 700-35C touring tire won't clear in your road bike either. That unsuitably wide tires exist for any given rim diameter in any given frame doesn't make them different ISO sizes. There are a spectrum of widths for almost every ISO format, choice is good! p.s. A 700-18 ultralight tire would fit your road bike rim as well. For you, I'd suggest a wider tire. In order to make this a regular road bike capable of mounting at least a 32 would be to exchange the crank for a compact and reset the spacing of the front derailleur. https://sfbay.craigslist.org/eby/bik/5920793876.html This gives you the best of all possible worlds. How the hell would a crank change squeeze a 32mm tire between Joerg's road bike chainstays?? Oh, I could squeeze that tire in there provided I pump it up afterwards. A minor side effect would be that my bike would then become a stationary one where the rear wheel won't turn :-) -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
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On 2017-01-04 15:55, wrote:
On Wednesday, January 4, 2017 at 12:05:54 PM UTC-8, Joerg wrote: On 2017-01-03 17:04, Joerg wrote: Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. Thanks to all responders (also Barry and Doug). I'll order Slime Rubber Cement with my next Amazon shipment because that's what David uses, he says it works well and it isn't expensive: https://www.amazon.com/Slime-1050-Ru.../dp/B003V9UU66 -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ That "rubber cement" isn't for gluing rubber. It's an elastic finish if memory serves. AFAIK it contains Heptane and is meant to partially dissolve the already vulcanized tube surface so the patch materials kind of partially flows into tht tube material for a durable bond. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#95
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On 2017-01-05 02:04, Tosspot wrote:
On 04/01/17 20:05, Joerg wrote: On 2017-01-03 17:04, Joerg wrote: Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. Thanks to all responders (also Barry and Doug). I'll order Slime Rubber Cement with my next Amazon shipment because that's what David uses, he says it works well and it isn't expensive: https://www.amazon.com/Slime-1050-Ru.../dp/B003V9UU66 Whatwhat!! Are you *seriously* claiming r.b.t has been useful!? What ever is the world coming to? Usenet is very useful, I guess that's where the name comes from. A lot of hints here go into my bicycle files, in the sense of "If ... ever breaks consider replacing it with ..." or "If it breaks don't ever use ...". When I mentioned in a post in a newsgroup that I had bonked, want to avoid it but can't stand the cyclist astronaut food or any sweet stuff someone responded with a link to a recipe for homemade non-sweet power bars. My wife bakes them to this day. Yesterday I shared these bars with another rider who really likes them as well. Can't buy them anywhere. Another example was a "how to" post I let off in some home improvement newsgroup about a decade ago, on how to change the bulb in a designer task light which is quite tricky. You need the manufacturers link to the drawing to really understand things. Year later the link broke and I still receive request about it. Luckily I have a local copy of that PDF file. Let's get back to chain lubes, that's much more fun :-) Or talk about bike paths :-) -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
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On 2017-01-05 07:59, wrote:
On Tuesday, January 3, 2017 at 8:04:38 PM UTC-5, Joerg wrote: Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ You can use place a second offset patch over an existing Rema patch. This way you can patch long slits using the F1 (25mm) Rema round patch. Patch one at a time, then sand the top of the patch in the direction of the patch center to the end, apply the vulcanizing fluid and apply the next. Repeat the process until the entire slit is patched. Make sure you start and end about 15 mm beyond the slit. You may also want to cut a small circle around the ends of the slit to stop the slit from expanding when the tube is inflated. You have not stated the tube size. This is important because the patch must fit within the width of the tube when the tube is flat. I've found I have to use the F0 (16 mm) patch for tube widths less than 25 mm. I've found the wider F1 (25 mm) patch will work with tubes with a nominal width of 28 mm and above. Up to 2.4" for the MTB and up to 25mm for the road bike. It's important that the patch edges are "glued." I've found the best way to insure this is to lie the tube on a flat surface and burnish the patch onto the tube after it's applied. I use a center to outside burnishing motion. I use the rounded edge of a Rema patch kit as my burnishing tool. There are some rubber compounds that won't work with the Rema vulcanizing fluid. Oh. That would be a concern. I didn't know things were this finicky. It also won't work in cold temperatures or when the tube is wet. However, I've found that most of the time the reason that patches don't adhere is due to improper application - pilot error. Sand over a bigger area than you spread the vulcanizing fluid; spread the vulcanizing fluid over a bigger area than the patch. Spread a thin layer of the vulcanizing fluid and let it dry before applying the patch. Don't blow on the vulcanizing fluid to hasten its drying - the moisture in your breath will neutralize it. If your tube has a rubber composition that will not work with the Rema vulcanizing fluid, you may want to reconsider your tube choice. There is no choice. I need very thick tubes and those are generally only available from Sunlite. Soemtimes Kenda. One has to watch out for tubes which are asymmetrical and only thicker towards the running surface. Those are not as good as tubes that are thick all around. I assume the reason you opt for a thick tube is to avoid flats. However, you are paying 3 times what I pay for normal thickness tubes. At about $0.75 per flat repair, I can make a lot of them to my inexpensive tube before reaching your $15 threshold. Doesn't matter to me. I simply do not wish to be delayed in my travels by yet another flat and then arrive late and with dirty hands. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#97
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analog
One has to watch out for tubes which are asymmetrical and only thicker towards the running surface. Those are not as good as tubes that are thick all around. squirrels carry blowguns n wait in the scrub ? |
#98
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Joerg wrote:
:Yup. Standard bicycle tubes are usually junk. Would you accept it if you :had to pump up the tires of your car every two weeks? Yet most cyclists :think this is "normal". Automotive tires have a much lower ratio of surface area to volume than bike tires. They're also run a lower pressure, for the most part. So even if the permiability of the two tires were the same, car tires would lose pressure slower. Of course, automotive tires are much more impermiable, because they're heavier and thicker (the inner liner of a typical car tire weighs as much as a bike tire does, all by itself.) -- sig 112 |
#99
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On 2017-01-16 10:40, DATAKOLL MARINE RESEARCH wrote:
analog One has to watch out for tubes which are asymmetrical and only thicker towards the running surface. Those are not as good as tubes that are thick all around. squirrels carry blowguns n wait in the scrub ? No, pinch flats that can occur when hitting surprise objects such as rocks or during "unplanned excursions off of the beaten path". As happened yesterday on my road bike. Had a runny nose, took both hands off the bar for a few seconds ... RAT-TAT-TAT Then there is the debris that gets flipped up when rolling over it and pierces the side wall. If bicycle tires had sturdy side walls the chances would be lower. But they don't. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#100
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On 2017-01-16 10:43, David Scheidt wrote:
Joerg wrote: :Yup. Standard bicycle tubes are usually junk. Would you accept it if you :had to pump up the tires of your car every two weeks? Yet most cyclists :think this is "normal". Automotive tires have a much lower ratio of surface area to volume than bike tires. They're also run a lower pressure, for the most part. Truck tires are often operated around 50psi or higher. Like my MTB tires are. ... So even if the permiability of the two tires were the same, car tires would lose pressure slower. It's the same on motorcycles which have tires similar in shape to what we ride, just larger. ... Of course, automotive tires are much more impermiable, because they're heavier and thicker (the inner liner of a typical car tire weighs as much as a bike tire does, all by itself.) Heavier & thicker = better. That why the first line item I look at in search of a better tire is the weight. Any weight weenie offerings need not apply. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
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