Tin Pot
Guru
Glueless...It is all about the glue. You must let it 'flash off' / dry before pressing the patch on. Sounds counter intuitive but if the glue has any 'wet' visible that is the path that leads to a bodged repair, that is.
Glueless...It is all about the glue. You must let it 'flash off' / dry before pressing the patch on. Sounds counter intuitive but if the glue has any 'wet' visible that is the path that leads to a bodged repair, that is.
Glueless...
I'll stick around to see how you got on.
This doesn't seem like a very statistically balanced observation. To make a fair comparison the test would have to be run using control tyres of the same make, model and amount of wear. If the people who have multiple repairs on a tube are getting more punctures then this could be more indicative of a tendency to keep tyres for longer before replacing whereas the people who fit a new tube everytime and throw away the old tube are doing similar with their tyres. i.e changing tyres every few months or even after a puncture (don't laugh, I have seen it suggested on this forum quite a few times). I still stand by my claim that it is physically impossible for a correctly repaired inner tube to be the cause of further punctures (I obviously exclude botched repairs from this statement).
I still have that inner tube in the car that you swapped over for me at CV, it would normally have been binned but those mtb tubes are that big it would fill it.OK, I just thought you were intending to add something relevant to the thread......![]()
Give it to me then, It will do for the boy's best bike......I still have that inner tube in the car that you swapped over for me at CV, it would normally have been binned but those mtb tubes are that big it would fill it.
Maybe I'll repair it one day, but probably not.
OK, I just thought you were intending to add something relevant to the thread......![]()
Do you not think there maybe a link between the people with the most patches getting the most punctures.
I don't. I'm obviously a 'patcher' and I can go for very long periods without a puncture and then like buses I might get two or three at a time.
But there may be something in it, if the repairs are not done properly.
....But, as cyclists we are all doing our bit for the environment and that should extend to not throwing something away that can be easily fixed.
Halfords!So I'm just ordering some fresh tubes and some patches, but I can't find an obvious puncture repair glue at Halfords.
They have tyre or tube sealant that you "squirt in and rotate the wheel a few times" which doesn't sound like puncture repair glue.
My "good" patch failed after 2hrs last night.
Halfords!
THIS is what you need, although I usually buy THIS one which is essentially the same. The important bit is to get feather edge patches to use with glue. If you do it right there is more than enough glue in that tiny tube and I now have a few unopened tubes of glue knocking about the workshop.