Smokin Joe
Squire
- Location
- Bare headed cyclist, Smoker
When you said messy to fit and replacing clinchers with tubeless I assumed you might be referring to replacing clinchers with tubs.What would make you think that?
When you said messy to fit and replacing clinchers with tubeless I assumed you might be referring to replacing clinchers with tubs.What would make you think that?
This does reflect my experience with 28mm and 30mm tyres on decent tubeless rims. Dead easy to work with lower pressures that are much more in line with MTB means the sealant has a chance. I didn't fiddle much with sealant but I always felt 90psi on a 23mm didn't give the sealant much of a chance. I suppose I have proven that as most of the ones I considered to have not sealed stopped leaking at 35-50psi. But you could feel that drop in pressure on 23mm. Oh Also at 95psi I knew before I felt it on the bike by the wet calves!! And getting it off the seat tube after a week of commuting mixed in with all the gunge was fecking nightmare!Over 20,000 km on tubeless (all Hutchinson Sector 28s) with no damage requiring any attention at the roadside whatsoever and only one puncture which I even noticed at that time. That was a glass cut about 5mm long or so which took a minute or so to seal, but did, with minimal loss of pressure (765psi down to 65psi). I later internally patched that and the tyre lasted another 3,000km before i replaced it. So far, tyres have lasted 10-12,000 km front and 7-8,000 rear so I'm not complaining about any aspect.
This is on Yorkshire Dales roads, which are buttery smooth and swept clean daily .... ;-) Or maybe not but, To be fair, there's very little in the way of bits of glass and flints, but the roads are quite rough for the most part so whilst it might be a pretty good environment for avoiding 'sharps' type punctures, it's heavy for wear and not good for pinch flats (with tubes).
Yes, you can put a tube in. I did that once, just to make sure that I could if necessary. I don't imagine I would ever return to using tubes though.
That was my other problem always added that bit more then whilst riding kept wondering if it was sloshing around too much slowing me downHad a double puncture on the X-One rear yesterday morning;didn't notice until I went to move the bike in the afternoon at work.Reckon it happened on a short hop between getting a coffee and work.
Was able to re-inflate to get me home and then this morning added some more sealant and tyre is still up at proper pressure.
I probably didn't put enough sealant in originally for it to seal properly,should be enough now.
Nope Tubeless.I think you might be confusing tubeless with tubular?
No, it will come from Giant setup tubeless.The bike may come with tubeless ready tyres, but you can bet your life they will come with tubes in.
Yes and yes.Ok cool thanks my new bike i ordered yesterday comes with tubeless tyres.... thats why i asked
Can i just use them like that then change to putting a tube in as and when?
That is a lovely bike.
That is a lovely bike.