Sujet : Re: Ebay prices
De : funkmaster (at) *nospam* hotmail.com (Zen Cycle)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 08. Apr 2025, 22:38:29
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vt450l$24035$3@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 4/8/2025 5:29 PM, Shadow wrote:
On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 13:06:16 -0400, Frank Krygowski
<frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
On 4/7/2025 2:01 PM, cyclintom wrote:
On Sun Apr 6 19:12:56 2025 Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 4/6/2025 6:04 PM, cyclintom wrote:
Yesterday, I was fixing flats on three different bikes. I went up to Robinson's and picked up some new tubes because the flats are all pin holes and I've never successfully repaired those. I fix one hole and another appears 3 inchs away. Nothing in the tire.
>
Wow. So many problems!
>
So now Frank is telling us that he never gets flats.
>
Not at all, Tom! I've described here getting something like three flats
within 15 miles. I've described other flats as well. Flats are a normal
part of bicycling.
>
But I do know how to successfully fix flats. Your "I've never
successfully repaired those. I fix one hole and another appears 3 inchs
away." is very, very unusual.
If there's a piece of fine wire in the tire repairing the
inner tube will not prevent a flat a few minutes later.
Fine wire is very common in our asphalt, which is made of
recycled truck/car tires (plus other stuff). It's the tires that have
those nasty stainless steel wires.
I always run my finger round the inside of the tire before
replacing the repaired inner tube. I usually simultaneously find the
culprit and puncture my finger..
Tom has complained about wire flats before. He blamed it on Biden.
[]'s
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