Tig
Fucktangular
Another useful item for tubeless is a tire hole plug kit. I like the one with a combination CO2 so you can add lost air after plugging the hole.
http://www.dynaplug.com/bicycles.html
http://www.dynaplug.com/bicycles.html
As far as I have been able to tell only the Giant bikes come with Tubeless as a standard for their gravel bikes. Most gravel bikes come tubeless ready but not tubeless. When looking over the bikes available it would have seemed to me that the Giant bikes were offering more than others at the same price point. For example the Toughroad SLR GX2 is $1210 MSRP, and comes with hydraulic brakes, tubeless tires, carbon fork on a AL frame with a Sora Groupset. The Trek Checkpoint AL3 is the same but has mech brakes and tubeless ready rims. The Kona Rove DL is $100 cheaper but has an Al fork and mech brakes. Just some examples. Of course I haven't ridden any of these so they might not be that equivalent. I've been doing this research because I want to get a bike pretty quick the next time I'm up north so I don't have to go a month of no riding and then have to get back in riding shape when I get back. It's harder to get back in shape every year so I'd rather not get out of it :P If I can narrow down the choices I should be able to get one faster. I had hoped to be under a grand but it doesn't look like the options there are extensive or that good. A budget of 2K would give me most anything I would need but I don't want to spend that much
a bike ride.Well I could have used tubeless tires today...a tiny nick in the tube caused by a shard of glass that would have sealed in like 1 rotation...oh well. So far this week that 1 flat and 1 broken spoke...wonder what's next :(
I pulled a bonehead move and tried to cross over the sunken street car rails in the street downtown with out approaching them perpendicularly...paid the price for my foolishness, hooked the front tire and ate pavement. Completely knocked the wind out of my lungs but I managed to get up sucking for air and get myself and the bike out of the street. Pedaled the rest of the way home and I’m nursing my wounds and rash with plenty of Advil, ice and a splash of bourbon.
I've seen RR tracks break bones.I pulled a bonehead move and tried to cross over the sunken street car rails in the street downtown with out approaching them perpendicularly...paid the price for my foolishness, hooked the front tire and ate pavement. Completely knocked the wind out of my lungs but I managed to get up sucking for air and get myself and the bike out of the street. Pedaled the rest of the way home and I’m nursing my wounds and rash with plenty of Advil, ice and a splash of bourbon.
I still have some residual effects in the one ear, though it seems to be diminishing. Kind of a low ring, and a sproingy effect/noise if I rub the entrance to my ear. I am thinking it will go away.
It really does look like I had the tire change done properly, and in fact, the bead looked seated evenly around the rim, so if I had understood the proper pressure to use, I would have stopped there and been just fine.
Spudman, who I rode with in my other post above, and who has worked in bike shops a lot over the years, said this has happened to him and others in the shops, with higher pressure tires, and to accept the mistake and get over it. It could have been worse and I could have had the tire and wheel between my legs, or held in my hand, or something could have hit my face or eyes.
And to be clear, I LOVE my carbon rims and tubeless set up with a 2.5 Minion (DHF) in the front and have loved the 2.4 Ardent which is being replaced by the Minion DHR in the rear, and the lower pressures I can run as a result. That, and the dropper post and newer geometry of my Kona has really helped me improve confidence on both flat and banked corners on our sometimes dry and loose earth. Not saying I am fast, and that is not really my goal at this point. Confident, in control and flowy is more the goal for me. The tubeless has helped.
I don't plan on worrying about tubeless for my road bikes. Tubes work fine, and I don't pinch or flat there much anyway. In that world, if it ain't broken, I am not going to fix it. If I buy a new Kona gravel at some point, and it comes tubeless, I will run what it comes with on that bike. But I have some other financial priorities before I can get to that purchase.
I've seen RR tracks break bones.
I'm glad it was only a flesh wound.
Well, could be worse! No head injury, stitches, broken bones, etc. Funny about your wife! Better go take out your skateboard and hit the skatepark instead!Managed to tear up my left knee, rash on left shoulder & left elbow. Have a bruised right palm, left rib cage and left hip.
Think I might have gave myself a slipped rib this morning with an awkward sneeze of all things.
My wife keeps texting me to remind me to stay off the bike or motorcycle today
Well, could be worse! No head injury, stitches, broken bones, etc. Funny about your wife! Better go take out your skateboard and hit the skatepark instead!
I like how Jeff nearly misses his throw of his board here.
I pulled a bonehead move and tried to cross over the sunken street car rails in the street downtown with out approaching them perpendicularly...paid the price for my foolishness, hooked the front tire and ate pavement. Completely knocked the wind out of my lungs but I managed to get up sucking for air and get myself and the bike out of the street. Pedaled the rest of the way home and I’m nursing my wounds and rash with plenty of Advil, ice and a splash of bourbon.
I now have a tube in one of my tubeless tires on Stan's tubeless rims. Bike shop couldn't get rid of the leak so I said fuck the tubeless, I'm putting a tube in it. Also my mountain bike will hang in the garage for several months at a time if I'm really training on my road bike. So resealing the tires after they lose air is not really practical for me. I will eventually just buy some regular rims for my Santa Cruz and forget about tubeless forever.
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Mojo. Everyone goes down at some point usually when you least expected it. So long as you have nothing serious. I had a bad one when a construction project caused fine mud to go on the road. I came around a corner and the bike when right out from under me. Lots of road rash and a separated shoulder. Riding back after a crash is no fun and you get all kinds of funny looks from folks since you are bleeding all over the place . Like Tig says only a flesh wound!
I was wondering about how long those tubeless will last. Since my next bike is a "vacation home" bike there will be potentially months, especially in the winter since we drive up to the place, where it would sit. Sounds like tubeless might well be something to just say no to