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#1
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
My work commute is usually 20 miles per day, and I typically have two
panniers, one my laptop/office bag. On the ride home last night I hit a piece of glass that not only punctured the tube but ripped the tire open, so in addition to my tube sticking out of the cut the tire's torn threads were also poking out. This is my first flat in probably 15 years (!), and was beyond repair as I couldn't fix the torn tire. I'm sure some duct tape or something similar applied in the tire would have let me limp home on a low PSI tire, but I didn't have those materials handy. My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. |
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#2
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
In article ,
Joel wrote: My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. It all depends on the daily conditions. If you're not even getting a flat but once every 15 years, it doesn't seem worthwhile to bring a whole new tire on every trip on the off chance you get a catastrophic blowout. Most people I know do carry a boot of some kind. Maybe a small strip of tire from an old one, but having a length of duct tape will work as well. If you have to improvise, a folded dollar bill is usually strong enough to get the job done, too. -- iPhone apps that matter: http://appstore.subsume.com/ My personal UDP list: 127.0.0.1, localhost, googlegroups.com, astraweb.com, and probably your server, too. |
#3
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
Interesting. What I should do is cut a section from my current ruined
tire and just tuck that in my saddle bag for an emergency boot. Thanks for the idea - DIY and economical. Yeah, I hesitated about that 15 years statement. While it's 100% true I'm sure I tipped some kind of karmic balance somewhere and will get a flat week once I get my tire replaced :-) On 2/22/2011 12:29 PM, Doc O'Leary wrote: In articleIfGdnRVY3epCY_7QnZ2dnUVZ_sydnZ2d@giganews. com, wrote: My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. It all depends on the daily conditions. If you're not even getting a flat but once every 15 years, it doesn't seem worthwhile to bring a whole new tire on every trip on the off chance you get a catastrophic blowout. Most people I know do carry a boot of some kind. Maybe a small strip of tire from an old one, but having a length of duct tape will work as well. If you have to improvise, a folded dollar bill is usually strong enough to get the job done, too. |
#4
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On 2/22/2011 1:47 PM, Phil W Lee wrote:
I carry a tyre boot. In my case, it's an empty toothpaste tube, with the ends cut off and scraped/washed. Photo's of patching method can be seen he http://s9.photobucket.com/albums/a80...e/Tyre%20boot/ That held for over 30 miles. Many other materials can be used, including proprietary designs like this Park one: http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/M...?ModelID=13249 I've heard good reports of denim as a boot material. Huh. That's a much bigger tear than what I had - and a piece of something durable like a toothpaste tube would have served me well. Thanks for the photos - I'll be reshuffling my saddle bag in the next day or so :-) |
#5
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On Feb 22, 1:22*pm, Joel wrote:
My work commute is usually 20 miles per day, and I typically have two panniers, one my laptop/office bag. On the ride home last night I hit a piece of glass that not only punctured the tube but ripped the tire open, so in addition to my tube sticking out of the cut the tire's torn threads were also poking out. This is my first flat in probably 15 years (!), and was beyond repair as I couldn't fix the torn tire. I'm sure some duct tape or something similar applied in the tire would have let me limp home on a low PSI tire, but I didn't have those materials handy. My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. I got a cut tire coming up on the last hour of a imperal quad (400 mi) ride- when I discovered that the routine replace tube and inflate wouldn't work as a result my ride extended by another hour for all my cursing...I managed to improvise with a plastic drivers lisc. holder and less than ideal pressure. |
#6
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On 2/22/2011 6:26 PM, Phil W Lee wrote:
You should have heard the bang when it blew the casing off the bead! I was riding mid-group, so was lucky to keep control and not get collected by any of my fellow riders as I stopped. Front tyre as well, so it got a bit "interesting" for a moment or two. It was my first group ride out on the bike after I got it, so the tyres were of unknown history. Needless to say, I replaced the pair before going out on it again - I'm betting it stood on flat tyres for some time, probably not in a good environment, and that this was the reason for the failure. I had a blow out once - looooong time ago on my first bike - a Schwinn single speed bike. Road it down to a service station to fill up the tires. Blissfully unaware of what the "PSI" wording was on the side of the tire I filled it up until I thought it was good. On the way home it blew and it I thought it was a bomb going off. Learned about PSI real fast :-) I'm surprised you didn't crash with two tires blowing out. I hang mine front rafter hooks if they're going to sit for a while now. |
#7
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On Feb 22, 10:22*am, Joel wrote:
My work commute is usually 20 miles per day, and I typically have two panniers, one my laptop/office bag. On the ride home last night I hit a piece of glass that not only punctured the tube but ripped the tire open, so in addition to my tube sticking out of the cut the tire's torn threads were also poking out. Don't carry a spare tire, but I do usually have a tire boot for such situations. A piece cut from an old tire works well, but in an emergency there are lots of alternatives. The most frequently available is a dollar bill. They are much stronger than regular paper and hold up for quite a while. Once I only had a $10 handy and I forgot about it until it eventually deteriorated and caused another flat hundreds of miles later. Ended up taping the pieces back together again to use it later at a store. The mylar wrappers from PowerBars and similar products are also good tire boots and are frequently carried when riding. |
#8
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On Tue, 22 Feb 2011 13:29:55 -0600, Doc O'Leary
wrote: In article , Joel wrote: My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. It all depends on the daily conditions. If you're not even getting a flat but once every 15 years, it doesn't seem worthwhile to bring a whole new tire on every trip on the off chance you get a catastrophic blowout. Most people I know do carry a boot of some kind. Maybe a small strip of tire from an old one, but having a length of duct tape will work as well. If you have to improvise, a folded dollar bill is usually strong enough to get the job done, too. I tried the folded dollar bill as a boot once. It lasted for about 2 miles. I believe that there was some discussion on why dollar bills dont really work well. IIRC, the tube and tire can squirm relative to each other and that shreds a dollar bill very quickly. I remember my dollar bill boots left a lot of shredded paper. Larry Larry -- Be polite when e-mailing me. Rudeness will get you nowhere. |
#9
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
On 2/22/2011 12:22 PM, Joel ? wrote:
My work commute is usually 20 miles per day, and I typically have two panniers, one my laptop/office bag. On the ride home last night I hit a piece of glass that not only punctured the tube but ripped the tire open, so in addition to my tube sticking out of the cut the tire's torn threads were also poking out. This is my first flat in probably 15 years (!), and was beyond repair as I couldn't fix the torn tire. I'm sure some duct tape or something similar applied in the tire would have let me limp home on a low PSI tire, but I didn't have those materials handy. My question to all you commuters: do you carry a folding tire for cases like this? They look a little pricier than normal tires, and I'm wondering if this is overkill on my part or if that's something regular commuters carry in a pannier. Carry a piece of Tyvek™ [1] envelope to use as an emergency tire boot. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyvek. -- Tºm Shermªn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
#10
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Anyone carry a folding tire?
In article ,
Larry wrote: I tried the folded dollar bill as a boot once. It lasted for about 2 miles. I believe that there was some discussion on why dollar bills dont really work well. IIRC, the tube and tire can squirm relative to each other and that shreds a dollar bill very quickly. I remember my dollar bill boots left a lot of shredded paper. I didn't say they were great at it, just that they were often the most common, cheapest thing to sacrifice in a pinch. Did the previous discussion suggest some other alternative that was stronger, other than having a proper boot packed beforehand? -- iPhone apps that matter: http://appstore.subsume.com/ My personal UDP list: 127.0.0.1, localhost, googlegroups.com, astraweb.com, and probably your server, too. |
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