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#1
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar
fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. |
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#2
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote:
So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed faster at higher pressures. Once out of the tire, such a hole will distend when you inflate to examine it so the original size of it is now unknown. Regarding sealer- a latex tube is only about 60 grams. You would have noticed right away if there was any significant goop inside from the weight alone, not to mention sloshing at the bottom. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#3
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote:
On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed faster at higher pressures. Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing didn't return. -Mark\ |
#4
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On 6/24/2017 3:12 PM, Mark J. wrote:
On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote: On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed faster at higher pressures. Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing didn't return. -Mark\ Well, that leaves a demon infestation doesn't it? -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#5
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On Saturday, June 24, 2017 at 11:04:55 AM UTC-7, Mark J. wrote:
So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? I've had this a couple of times within the last five years. I THINK that what is happening is that the tube was a little twisted in the tire. When you picked up the glass the deflation caused you to stop before the glass tore a larger hole. When the tire got soft enough and you picked the glass out the tube twisted a tiny bit so that there wasn't a hole in the tire where the tube puncture was. This allowed the tube to press solidly against an airtight surface. The more bouncing you do the faster these things will deflate. And overnight they will deflate completely. I've pulled the tube out and pumped it WAY up and used a pail of water and still been unable to find the leak. But after a ride the tire is soft again. A couple of these tubes I simply threw away rather than chase the leak more than with a pail of water.. |
#6
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On 6/24/2017 1:14 PM, AMuzi wrote:
On 6/24/2017 3:12 PM, Mark J. wrote: On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote: On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed faster at higher pressures. Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing didn't return. -Mark\ Well, that leaves a demon infestation doesn't it? Maxwell's demon, yeah. That's why I gave such lengthy detail - the obvious answers don't seem to work. Mark |
#7
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
Mark J. wrote:
:On 6/24/2017 1:14 PM, AMuzi wrote: : On 6/24/2017 3:12 PM, Mark J. wrote: : On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote: : On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: : So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar : fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. : : Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, : originally at 105 psi. : : In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out : immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or : rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. : Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit : soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but : definitely not flat. : : "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. : : There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts : some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when : mounting. : : Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some : shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change : the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan : sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, : examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the : tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. : Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and : shallow, might not have been the cause. : : Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with : frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles : from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's : built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, : head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my : bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not : needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation : with mini-pump. : : On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no : sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, : front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge : says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. : : Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a : bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, : matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where : the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire : tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The : pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow : leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up : audibly right away. : : The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would : expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible : leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim : slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least : changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the : hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm : 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with : sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). : : Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow : (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc : liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire : when dismounting. : : Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 : yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 : lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel : from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. : : What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? : : Mark J. : : Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed : faster at higher pressures. : : Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing : didn't return. : -Mark\ : : Well, that leaves a demon infestation doesn't it? : :Maxwell's demon, yeah. That's why I gave such lengthy detail - the bvious answers don't seem to work. I've seen some some holes that behave like this, too, but in car tires. (I used to run a garage, I've dealt with thousands of flats) My though was maybe that the puncture isn't normal to the surface of Jthe tube, but at an angle, and so under pressure the tube can squeeze it shut, at least some times. That's pretty common in car flats, which have rather more depth in the innerliner than bike tubes do. -- sig 127 |
#8
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On Sunday, June 25, 2017 at 6:08:07 AM UTC-7, David Scheidt wrote:
Mark J. wrote: :On 6/24/2017 1:14 PM, AMuzi wrote: : On 6/24/2017 3:12 PM, Mark J. wrote: : On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote: : On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: : So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar : fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. : : Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, : originally at 105 psi. : : In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out : immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or : rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. : Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit : soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but : definitely not flat. : : "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. : : There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts : some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when : mounting. : : Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some : shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change : the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan : sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, : examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the : tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. : Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and : shallow, might not have been the cause. : : Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with : frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles : from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's : built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, : head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my : bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not : needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation : with mini-pump. : : On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no : sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, : front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge : says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. : : Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a : bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, : matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where : the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire : tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The : pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow : leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up : audibly right away. : : The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would : expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible : leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim : slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least : changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the : hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm : 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with : sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). : : Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow : (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc : liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire : when dismounting. : : Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 : yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 : lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel : from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. : : What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? : : Mark J. : : Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed : faster at higher pressures. : : Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing : didn't return. : -Mark\ : : Well, that leaves a demon infestation doesn't it? : :Maxwell's demon, yeah. That's why I gave such lengthy detail - the bvious answers don't seem to work. I've seen some some holes that behave like this, too, but in car tires. (I used to run a garage, I've dealt with thousands of flats) My though was maybe that the puncture isn't normal to the surface of Jthe tube, but at an angle, and so under pressure the tube can squeeze it shut, at least some times. That's pretty common in car flats, which have rather more depth in the innerliner than bike tubes do. I think that might be part of the effect. Bicycle tires being completely round the tube is never at a "normal" angle. I do know that this type of flat occurs often enough that most active riders know about them. |
#9
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
For your reference, records indicate that
David Scheidt wrote: My though was maybe that the puncture isn't normal to the surface of Jthe tube, but at an angle, and so under pressure the tube can squeeze it shut, at least some times. Yeah, I’d guess something along these lines. Even a straight slice would exhibit similarly behavior. Like a piece a paper pressed against a screen by the wind, a clean cut wouldn’t allow much air to pass through. But if it were held open a bit by debris, the air flow could actually help to push the opening even larger. A small 2D cut becomes a large 3D hole, which goes back to 2D when the debris/flow is removed. It’d be interesting to examine the puncture in question under a microscope to see what it looked like. -- "Also . . . I can kill you with my brain." River Tam, Trash, Firefly |
#10
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The case of the mysterious un-punctured puncture
On 6/24/2017 1:12 PM, Mark J. wrote:
On 6/24/2017 11:58 AM, AMuzi wrote: On 6/24/2017 1:04 PM, Mark J. wrote: So, yesterday I was riding and heard the familiar fwisssh-fwisssh-fwisssh of a puncture. Veloflex Master 700x25 tire, unpatched Vittoria latex tube, originally at 105 psi. In the first few seconds, expecting the tire to bottom out immediately, I looked down to see if it was the front or rear tire. Couldn't tell. Stopped and examined the tires. Snapping a finger against the tire showed the rear was a bit soft (lower frequency "ping" than front when snapped), but definitely not flat. "Fwisssh" is greatly reduced, but still slightly audible. There is ***NO*** sealant in my tubes - unless Vittoria puts some in without advertising, and it's undetectable when mounting. Remounted and rode another several hundred feet to some shade (around 90F and sunny), assuming I'd need to change the tube. Rear tire is /not/ sagging visibly; I have tan sidewalls, which makes sag easier to see. In the shade, examine rear for protruding wire/tack/stone/glass, see the tiniest bit of glass, but the tire is still mostly firm. Pick out glass with Swiss army knife, it was so small and shallow, might not have been the cause. Then I do something I *never* do - top off the tire with frame pump. This should have been futile - I was ~8 miles from home, but I thought I'd see where it went. Pump's built-in gauge starts at ~60 psi, I top it up to ~100 psi, head home. Weeks ago I had removed the inflator from my bike bag, and it was really hot, so I appreciated not needing to do the entire tube replacement and slow inflation with mini-pump. On the way home, looking at the tire periodically, I see no sag. Intentionally going over small bumps/rough pavement, front and rear feel similar. Get all the way home. Gauge says tire is now ~50, but it feels much firmer than that. Next day, tire is flat as expected (and latex tubes leak a bit anyway). Dismount tire, find generic pinhole in tube, matching tiny hole in tire. Can't remember if this is where the glass was; there are 5-6 *tiny* holes/blemishes in tire tread, the kind that often don't result in a flat. The pinhole is *NOT* a *slow* leak; I've patched plenty of slow leaks that require immersion to locate. This one shows up audibly right away. The mystery - on the road, the flat behaved as I would expect a tire with sealant to behave. Fast, highly audible leak that should have had me quickly riding on the rim slowly diminishes and stops at about 60 psi, or at least changes to a very slow leak. At home while patching, the hole was clean and unclogged - no signs of sealant (and I'm 99% sure there never was any.) (My entire experience with sealant is reading about it, I've never used any). Tube could have stuck to the tire casing and sealed somehow (I think Jobst once speculated on this), but I talc liberally, and the tube definitely didn't stick to the tire when dismounting. Other details: Front tire is at 70 psi today, down from 90 yesterday, that's normal latex leakage. I weigh about 170 lbs. Road debris around here is mostly bearing-sized gravel from pavement deterioration, with some larger bits mixed in. What happened? Benevolent Gremlins? Mark J. Could be just a very small puncture, which will bleed faster at higher pressures. Yes, but when I reinflated back to 100 psi, the hissing didn't return. -Mark\ Sigh. Trust Muzi, he was right. Turns out I had a ~1mm casing cut. Next ride, the latex tube (again) /slowly/ bulged out 10 miles into the ride and blew, then seemingly re-sealed at around 40-60 psi. Stuck a Rema patch over the casing cut, but haven't road-tested it yet. Mark J. |
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