Sujet : Re: First flat in a looooong time
De : news51 (at) *nospam* mystrobl.de (Wolfgang Strobl)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 01. Apr 2025, 19:19:00
Autres entêtes
Organisation : @home
Message-ID : <9eaoujdem21cogf4aue0j9jfem20rjl9ti@4ax.com>
References : 1
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
Am Wed, 26 Mar 2025 22:01:05 -0400 schrieb Joy Beeson
<
jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid>:
>
Tuesday, 25 March 2025
>
On Saturday, I came out of Aldi to find my front tire flat.
>
On Monday, I walked to the Trailhouse and handed the wheel
to the mechanic with instructions to put in a new tube and
find out what had happened to the old one.
Many years ago, when commuting each work day by bike, I got a flat now
an then, too. Most often, I just patched the tube and continued my
commute. My record was something like a bit more than seven minutes,
from removing the tire to pumping up. Ideal conditions, sunny morning,
a a clean place to do the repair, a somewhat soft tire that I could
remove with my bare hands, an easily found small puncture and, last but
not least, a fresh repair kit from TipTop. On other occasions, I just
mounted a new tube and patched at home, later. Nowadays, when doing
long tours throughout the region, I still carry a tube, but haven't had
a need for it, so far. Perhaps I have better chances to avoid punctures
because I avoid so called "bicycle infrastructure", but perhaps the
tubeless tires plus sealant are just working.
>
He showed me a crack at the base of the valve stem. The
tube had died of old age!
As Andrew said, perhaps not enough pressure. That was my first
reaction, too.
-- Wir danken für die Beachtung aller Sicherheitsbestimmungen