PaulSB
Squire
- Location
- Chorley, Lancashire
Perhaps you should try tubeless before condemning them?
My personal experience is no punctures which didn't self-seal in six years, but many that did seal. I've had one tyre with a catastrophic gash of about 1½" which required a two mile walk home. Nothing could have fixed this, tubed or tubeless. The one crucial aspect I've found with tubeless is to find the right valves. I could give chapter and verse on why I love tubeless but it wouldn't be fact.
I read your first post a few times and wasn't going to respond until I read this one. Far from presenting facts you offered a small rant based on observation and third hand experience. That's fine, I imagine the vast majority on here make decisions based on our own and others experience. If a riding companion tells me of his/her experience I take note and may/may not adopt a technique or product. Lets not though present, very valuable, real world, experience as facts.@Dogtrousers, I presented facts. I invite you to do the same. Salesmen hate me because I don't buy anything on emotion or spur-of-the-moment decisions. I am a very detail-oriented engineer, and I research everything. Tubeless might be more suitable for MTB; but I don't get involved in MTB, only road bikes. If you live in goathead land and get a lot of flats, you can put the sealant in inner tubes too, and then you don't need a special pump when you mount the tire. Sealant is nothing new though. We sold it in the bike shop in the late 1970's when I worked there.
My personal experience is no punctures which didn't self-seal in six years, but many that did seal. I've had one tyre with a catastrophic gash of about 1½" which required a two mile walk home. Nothing could have fixed this, tubed or tubeless. The one crucial aspect I've found with tubeless is to find the right valves. I could give chapter and verse on why I love tubeless but it wouldn't be fact.
