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#41
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
Sorry, but I find my life and health too valuable to run with that sort of hazard mounted on the front rim. Again, you do not properly fix any of the frayed strands with that. IOW an accident waiting to happen. Well, it's your life, not mine. Oh nonsense. As I said at the outset experience has shown that if you nip the fraying in the bud, the tire is still fine. You can verify this by running your finger over it. A little fraying does not mean there is a bulge there. From that point what is there to worry about , as you can just watch it daily, and see that it is not getting worse? I have already gone thru this exercise and can enjoy the awesome performance of the gatorskin Luckily, its a rear wheel in the picture. When is the last time you died due to a rear blow-out? I'd have to ask the social security office :-) ... I've blown an overheated tire on a tandem on a 15% descent and didn't die. At least I don't think I died -- but that's a question for the philosophy NG. When the rear blew on my MTB last time it was so violent that it caused serious damage. A chunk of the tire flew off and must have hit stuff in the process. Smashed the charge controller circuit board, rear light blown to smittereens, some bent metal, a hole in the canvas trunk. I had to hoof it home for many miles with a bike that was unwilling to roll. Anyhow, what good does such a "fix" do for the Gatorskins that developed sidewall failure on my front wheel? Nothing. This sort of fix is totally inadequate and dangerous. It would have prevented it from getting to the point of being dangerous if you had just dabbed a drop of stuff on it when it first happened. That said, given the frequency that the fraying occurs, I am starting to think that the fraying comes from unmounting and mounting the wheel, esp. w/o lowering the tire pressure. |
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#42
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 2018-05-05 22:16, Doug Landau wrote:
Sorry, but I find my life and health too valuable to run with that sort of hazard mounted on the front rim. Again, you do not properly fix any of the frayed strands with that. IOW an accident waiting to happen. Well, it's your life, not mine. Oh nonsense. As I said at the outset experience has shown that if you nip the fraying in the bud, the tire is still fine. You can verify this by running your finger over it. A little fraying does not mean there is a bulge there. Oh man. ... From that point what is there to worry about , as you can just watch it daily, and see that it is not getting worse? I have already gone thru this exercise and can enjoy the awesome performance of the gatorskin It's your health that is at risk, not mine. Luckily, its a rear wheel in the picture. When is the last time you died due to a rear blow-out? I'd have to ask the social security office :-) ... I've blown an overheated tire on a tandem on a 15% descent and didn't die. At least I don't think I died -- but that's a question for the philosophy NG. When the rear blew on my MTB last time it was so violent that it caused serious damage. A chunk of the tire flew off and must have hit stuff in the process. Smashed the charge controller circuit board, rear light blown to smittereens, some bent metal, a hole in the canvas trunk. I had to hoof it home for many miles with a bike that was unwilling to roll. Anyhow, what good does such a "fix" do for the Gatorskins that developed sidewall failure on my front wheel? Nothing. This sort of fix is totally inadequate and dangerous. It would have prevented it from getting to the point of being dangerous if you had just dabbed a drop of stuff on it when it first happened. No. At that point the fibers were already compromised. That said, given the frequency that the fraying occurs, I am starting to think that the fraying comes from unmounting and mounting the wheel, esp. w/o lowering the tire pressure. How that? At least my brakes have a little lever that gets flicked outward for wheel mounting, then back. Nothing will rub or chafe. My Gatorskins failed more or less prontissimo. Either with a loud bang or by me noting a developing "aneurysm". Anyhow, in my garage they are banned now. Now I am using tires where I do not have to inspect the rims after every ride with a magnifying glass like Inspecteur Clouseau. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#43
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 5/4/2018 4:51 PM, Joerg wrote:
On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. https://www.hardlineproducts.com/product/tread-doctor-knobby-cutting-tool-for-usa/ |
#44
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 5/5/2018 9:58 PM, Doug Landau wrote:
On Friday, May 4, 2018 at 4:50:46 PM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ I think you missed the sarcasm Okay, but sarcasm often doesn't work well on Usenet. The Onion is a different story. |
#45
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 2018-05-07 06:43, sms wrote:
On 5/4/2018 4:51 PM, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. https://www.hardlineproducts.com/product/tread-doctor-knobby-cutting-tool-for-usa/ Yup. Another accident waiting to happen. The ones I saw in Europe had sort of a heated "cutting box" at the tip to "dregde" the tread valley. It's really sick, just like glueing tire side walls is. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#46
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On Monday, May 7, 2018 at 8:00:58 AM UTC-7, Joerg wrote:
On 2018-05-07 06:43, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 4:51 PM, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. https://www.hardlineproducts.com/product/tread-doctor-knobby-cutting-tool-for-usa/ Yup. Another accident waiting to happen. The ones I saw in Europe had sort of a heated "cutting box" at the tip to "dregde" the tread valley. It's really sick, just like glueing tire side walls is. Why is it another accident waiting to happen? The cutting of knobs looks pretty benign. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...&v=eHeNgjNDSwI The knife doesn't even come close to the cords. I also don't see how putting some shoe goo-ish substance on a scuffed sidewall is so dangerous. I've ridden plenty of tires with scuffed sidewalls with no patch at all. I just wore them out. It's not like Doug is patching some gash, and in fact, looking at the tire, it's hard to see the scuff. -- Jay Beattie. |
#47
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 07/05/2018 1:32 PM, jbeattie wrote:
On Monday, May 7, 2018 at 8:00:58 AM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-07 06:43, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 4:51 PM, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. https://www.hardlineproducts.com/product/tread-doctor-knobby-cutting-tool-for-usa/ Yup. Another accident waiting to happen. The ones I saw in Europe had sort of a heated "cutting box" at the tip to "dregde" the tread valley. It's really sick, just like glueing tire side walls is. Why is it another accident waiting to happen? The cutting of knobs looks pretty benign. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...&v=eHeNgjNDSwI The knife doesn't even come close to the cords. I also don't see how putting some shoe goo-ish substance on a scuffed sidewall is so dangerous. I've ridden plenty of tires with scuffed sidewalls with no patch at all. I just wore them out. It's not like Doug is patching some gash, and in fact, looking at the tire, it's hard to see the scuff. But things are different out in the wild west Jay. Imagine a blowout when the mountain lions are circling. You'd do anything to prevent that except maybe carry a chain tool. There are limits to everything. |
#48
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On 2018-05-07 11:01, Duane wrote:
On 07/05/2018 1:32 PM, jbeattie wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2018 at 8:00:58 AM UTC-7, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-07 06:43, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 4:51 PM, Joerg wrote: On 2018-05-04 15:07, sms wrote: On 5/4/2018 10:52 AM, Doug Landau wrote: With a $45 tire I do not expect to have to rant snipped I spent another few minutes and $1 of gorilla snot on this tire : https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdsokmbfixi7jf2/tire.jpg?dl=0 I'll get my 3K miles out of this gatorskin, no problem OMG, what a terribly ridiculous thing to do to save a few bucks. It reminds me of the guys who used some sort of glorified soldering iron to cut "new tread" into their car tires when they were bald. To save the expense of having to buy new ones. https://www.hardlineproducts.com/product/tread-doctor-knobby-cutting-tool-for-usa/ Yup. Another accident waiting to happen. The ones I saw in Europe had sort of a heated "cutting box" at the tip to "dregde" the tread valley. It's really sick, just like glueing tire side walls is. Why is it another accident waiting to happen? The cutting of knobs looks pretty benign. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...&v=eHeNgjNDSwI The knife doesn't even come close to the cords. Re-shaping knobbies can be ok but people use these to deepen the valleys as well. Also, take a closer look at the video and you can see how he damages the "meat" next to the knobbies. That can trigger a progressing hair fracture in the rubber next to the knobbies and then somewhere in the boonies ... *POOF* ... tire is gone. I won't likely cause injury but a non-rideable dirt bike 50mi from anywhere can be very unpleasant. I also don't see how putting some shoe goo-ish substance on a scuffed sidewall is so dangerous. I've ridden plenty of tires with scuffed sidewalls with no patch at all. I just wore them out. It's not like Doug is patching some gash, and in fact, looking at the tire, it's hard to see the scuff. Pictures Doug posted earlier clearly showed compromised and frayed threads. These do not re-gain any strength whatsoever from such a cosmetic "repair". It's like smearing Bondo over a structural crack on a vehicle. We all know what can happen if the front road bike tire blows on a fast downhill section of road. But things are different out in the wild west Jay. Imagine a blowout when the mountain lions are circling. ... I had cattle around me when that happened last time. The kaboom made them run away. Luckily that didn't cause a stampede of the rest of the herd. Strangely, while I was cleaning up the pieces that had flown off the bike they came back. Probably curious enough to see what's going on. ... You'd do anything to prevent that except maybe carry a chain tool. There are limits to everything. Guys, I went ahead and dunnit. Ordered a Crank Brothers M19 bike tool this morning so I don't have to carry individual hex wrenches. Makes it easier when helping others as well. https://www.crankbrothers.com/produc...nt=53958754055 It has a chain tool! So the old hardened-steel concrete nail can be retired. That nail has been with me for decades, maybe I should frame it. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#49
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
On Monday, May 7, 2018 at 12:50:15 PM UTC-7, Joerg wrote:
snip Re-shaping knobbies can be ok but people use these to deepen the valleys as well. Also, take a closer look at the video and you can see how he damages the "meat" next to the knobbies. That can trigger a progressing hair fracture in the rubber next to the knobbies and then somewhere in the boonies ... *POOF* ... tire is gone. I won't likely cause injury but a non-rideable dirt bike 50mi from anywhere can be very unpleasant. Tread cutting is done regularly by MTB racers. https://www.bicycling.com/training/a...-to-cut-tires/ And, of course, motorcycle racers. It doesn't lead to a failure unless you penetrate the casing, and then you get a flat -- and not some massive, tire-ending failure. The tire is not gone. I've booted innumerable casing cuts and ridden home. I also don't see how putting some shoe goo-ish substance on a scuffed sidewall is so dangerous. I've ridden plenty of tires with scuffed sidewalls with no patch at all. I just wore them out. It's not like Doug is patching some gash, and in fact, looking at the tire, it's hard to see the scuff. Pictures Doug posted earlier clearly showed compromised and frayed threads. These do not re-gain any strength whatsoever from such a cosmetic "repair". It's like smearing Bondo over a structural crack on a vehicle. We all know what can happen if the front road bike tire blows on a fast downhill section of road. Doug says it was minor and nothing in the pictures indicates a serious problem. Assuming his casing scuff developed into a casing failure (which I doubt), he would get a rear blow-out -- or just a rear flat if the resulting hole were small. He could fold-over a dollar bill, boot the tire, put in a spare tube and ride home. Yawn. None of this will or could happen if he just kept an eye on the tire, which he is doing. Bad casings will bulge long before they burst, if they every burst. But things are different out in the wild west Jay. Imagine a blowout when the mountain lions are circling. ... I had cattle around me when that happened last time. The kaboom made them run away. Luckily that didn't cause a stampede of the rest of the herd. Strangely, while I was cleaning up the pieces that had flown off the bike they came back. Probably curious enough to see what's going on. Pieces flying off the bike? What? Do you run your tires at 1,000 PSI? Are you using your wheels for shotgun target practice? -- Jay Beattie. |
#50
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Desperate needs = desperate but workable solution
Regarding the tread cutter, ISTM this is likely to be more effort than flipping the tire around. |
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