ratz
Wielder of the Rubber Mallet
Bob,
I agree with a lot of your post, but in our experience we see a lot of people (roadies and recumbents together so no one group in particular) doing improper installation of these systems on very budget rims that sometimes are not even true to begin with, resulting in failure. The more complicated these become and the more precise the install needs to be to prevent a failure the more trouble it is as more and more people try to handle these kinds of instals on their own without finding the proper mechanic to install or at the very least show them how to do it.
As as you mention that many bikes come stock with crappy wheels, which to me is always shocking as it is a critical element to keeping you safe. But the reality is that 80% plus of people opt for the lowest common denominator in wheels even when "upgrading" - sometimes due to price, sometimes due to other beliefs they hold about wheels in general (like wanting as few spokes as humanly possible - always a "WTF" to me)
I concur; tubeless make short cuts more obvious; my Larry slide was a quick lesson in doing it right. Hardy is having good tubeless results but he's the classic do it correct and careful person; and he's a skeptic by default.
It's important that when we share this knowledge that we pause and mention the cautionary item. I won't tell anyone not to buy Chinnesse budget wheels; I'll warn against it, and watch closely, with interest, to see if they succeed. Sadly I don't often think about the torque on our front wheels; I'm wired "Good, Fast, Cheap" pick two. So I assume people understand the implications for Cheap.
That's what great about our little corner of the Internet here; lots of good info; cautionary advise and enough risk tackers to push the edge. And we get to discuss it from every Angle.
Oh and people those A67 wheels really are out right theft. I was not a believer; now that I have some..... for starter wheels and for anything other than deep v carbon; you are going to be hard pressed to do better. You can alway buy the wheels and have them rebuilt with better super high end hubs if you must; you we'll be many $$$ ahead. They just aren't tubeless.
Ironically the aura5 Bontrager carbon wheel won't hold the air and that is tubeless compatible.
I had to use a mix of Bontrager and Stans sealant to get a multi-day air seal. The #1 place the Aura looses air is at the Stem. I started using silcone caulk on the head of the stem inside the wheel and the problem went away.