Bass Culture
New Member
I've only recently joined so be gentle with me, but I've run into a particularly bemusing issue with my Cotic Cascade gravel bike. I've had the bike a couple of years and have enjoyed taking it out on road and off road runs. I was originally supplied with a tubeless set up. Being a numpty (I'm 63, tubeless wasn't a thing in 'my day'!), I hadn't realised the sealant needed regular topping up, so no surprise when I got a puncture at the beginning of this year, it didn't seal. After trying to service the tyre by topping the sealant (Stan's) it still wasn't sealing - however, this is quite possibly because I was pumping it up, rotating the wheel to rest on the puncture, but leaving it overnight. Again, I'd not realised that it should be ridden straight away to help the sealant circulate around the tyre and do its job. So, based on the fact I'm a fairweather cyclist and tend not to ride too much over the winter, I decided tubes might be a better option for me and bought a couple of Aeron TPU tubes. This is where the fun starts! After installing the tube in the rear tyre, I left it and took it out for a ride a day or two later - about 16 miles or so along a local canal and cycle path, mostly tarmac with occasional branches etc. Put the bike away after my ride and when I returned to it the next morning, the rear tyre was completely flat. I obviously assumed I'd punctured again so removed the TPU inner tube. However, at £20+ each I was going to repair and reuse it for emergencies. When I took it out to locate the puncture though (pumped to about 5 psi and passed through a bucket of water) there was no air leaking at all! I presumed therefore that I must have knocked the valve or something (though there was air wasn't obviously escaping from that either) and reinstalled the same inner tube. When I pumped it up to full pressure (about 30psi) there was air started escaping through the original tyre puncture that I had at the beginning of the year! And sure enough, the tyre has deflated overnight, now I've come back to it this morning. Same again though - removed, tested in a bucket of water and no leaks apparent.
I'm scratching my head about this now and don't know whether revert to tubeless or persevere with tubes and buy a couple of butyl ones. Obviously, when there's a tube in, logic dicates the tube can be the only thing that the air is escaping from! However, there is no obvious leak but the tyre slight deflates overnight. Has anyone ever come across anything like this before?!
I'm scratching my head about this now and don't know whether revert to tubeless or persevere with tubes and buy a couple of butyl ones. Obviously, when there's a tube in, logic dicates the tube can be the only thing that the air is escaping from! However, there is no obvious leak but the tyre slight deflates overnight. Has anyone ever come across anything like this before?!