New tubes or "make do and mend"?

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
OP
OP
Holdsworth

Holdsworth

Guru
Location
Crewe, Cheshire
I have finally got some new tubes from the LBS and the tyre is now holding air. I have checked round the tyre for any more foreign bodies that might p'ture the tube again but I couldn't find anything obvious by looking and running my hand over the inner and outer surfaces.

Whilst I was at the LBS I had a browse of their tyre section and had a chat with the owner. He recommended me the "Continental Gatorskin Hardshells" as a decent set of p'ture-proof tyres. How do these compare with other makes of tyres and are they good value for money at £28 each?
 
OP
OP
Holdsworth

Holdsworth

Guru
Location
Crewe, Cheshire
So does anyone recommend the Gatorskin Harshells over other brands of tyre?
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
Re-use is always more beneficial than recycling, and I'm quite content to use the old tubes for a number of jobs, most of which would otherwise be done with newly bought materials.

My biggest problem is that written off tubes are even rarer than punctures so I never have enough of them for the other jobs. (I'm waiting for a puncture, or a donated tube would do, at present so I can replace part of the soft edging on my workbench - a case where old tubes are the best, no substitute accepted!)


I'll try to remember to have a look at work - we get bikes dumped on the reserve that often have one pringled wheel - I could whip a tube out for you.

Or if I get time to replace the tube in the trailer that has 13 patches in it, you could have that.

As for patches being expensive, I'm lucky enough to be a the York rally every year, and there's always some stall selling a bag of 100 patches for a couple of quid, so I stock up, and distribute several extras into each repair kit I have (one in each pannier or rack pack I own, generally.) Might be worth folk looking out for a Cycle Promotions sale locally, as I think they have bags of patches.
 

John the Monkey

Frivolous Cyclist
Location
Crewe
So does anyone recommend the Gatorskin Harshells over other brands of tyre?

I've ridden Gatorskins (25c Wire on).

I found them excellent in the dry, and they roll really nicely at the recommended 95psi. The downside for the set I had was their slippiness in the wet - to this day, they're the only tyre I've managed to wheelspin (trying to sprint away from a set of lights). In the end, I lost confidence in them. Bear in mind that not everyone has that experience with them, and this is prior to the re-branding of them as "Hardshell" (the rubber compound could have changed, &c)

Wire on Schwalbe Stelvio (if they're still available) might be a good budget choice - I really liked mine. I did a quick round up of the tyres I've tried so far on my blog here.
 

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
I've been running a set of 23c Ultra Gatorskins since last April, and find them really good. They're only skittish in the wet if I hit the usual metal draincover / road studs / paint markings. I've had one flat in that time, and it was a slow one that went down over weeks when I was on holiday over Christmas.

Prior to that I had two sets of 25c Schwalbe Stelvios, which were great tyres although they did get cut-up pretty quickly on the roads in Edinburgh and those big gashes would ultimately pick up & trap sharp bits of glass / flint etc which lead to frequent unexpected deflations.
 
OP
OP
Holdsworth

Holdsworth

Guru
Location
Crewe, Cheshire
Hmmmm tough choice.....

I will spend a few days to thoroughly think over which tyre to get and I would appreciate any more feedback on any decent p'ture resistant tyre.

Also my TT02 p'ture repair kit arrived today from Wiggle so I will spend tonight patching up one of the tubes from the other day to use as a spare.
 

J4CKO

New Member
I generally carry new spares for an easy roadside switch, I also have a box into which punctured tubes go and then when I have say five I have a
puncture fixing session and sometimes swap the fixed ones onto the bike and keep the intact ones as spares, generally coincides with a proper service of the bike.

I dont throw them away unless unrepairable, no point in having an arbitrary number of punctures as the threshold, I kind of reckon that the more patches they get they actually get more puncture resistant and also I feel like they have served me well, kind of like playing Conkers adding one for each win, my best being a 5'er !

I keep one in my rucksack and one in the seat bag, I used the rucksack when I travel with work, was ont he way to Boston and caused a minor security alert in security at Manchester as they spotted this strange object, they all had a good laugh when I was asked to take it out and unravelled
a 700c tube, probably though it was some exotic pet or sex toy :biggrin: which I would never put in my rucksack, thats what my suitcase is for....
 
Top Bottom