cranky cyclist
Guru
Amazing!
A new Silvio adventure. I was about 30 miles into my 45 mile ride when I heard a loud pop and the front tire went flat. I was going about 20mph, did not hit anything like a pothole or chip seal, and had no problem steering the bike to a prompt stop. I decided not to try and fix the flat and Uber'd it home. At home I found the tube had a 1/8 hole, not a slit, but a real hole. I could not find any corresponding hole in the tire.
This morning I inserted a new tube and began pumping up the tire...pop! Again. This time I inspected the tire and found a 1" tear between the tire bead and the side wall. I have never had a tire fail this way. I have put almost 4,000 miles on this set of tires. I wonder if this is a random defect or if I should replace tires after a certain mileage regardless of how much tread remains.
Has anyone experienced this kind of failure? The tire is a Kenda 28mm 700c commuter tire. My original Panaracer tires lasted about 700 miles before they started getting flats and I replaced them with the Kenda's.
Hmmm what is a reasonable mileage expectation for tubeless?
Schwalbe One 700c x 28mm
I didn't have any problems with my Pro Ones, but I'm still on the first set (about 2500 miles in). I am going to swap them out for new ones sometime soon, I will let you know if any problems come up.Well so far I'm not a fan of the Pro One's. After I had a spoke to break for no apparent reason, and had to redo the rim tape after replacing it and then getting both wheels trued/spokes re-tensioned, I thought it would be a good time to replace the 28mm One's with 28mm Pro One's. Even though the One's really showed no signs of wear they have 2400+ miles on them so off they came. The first Pro One inflated ok with the air compressor but leaked at one spot; the other one wouldn't even begin to inflate. So I put tubes in to mate them with the rims, went for a short ride and the first one was obviously defective---severely out of round. No wonder it leaked. Tried again to inflate the other one without a tube in it--nothing doing. So I put the old One's back on and they inflated just with a standard floor pump. I think they'll do for now.
The question is, did I get 2 defective Pro One's? I can understand getting one just by chance, not even Schwalbe is perfect, and I guess an occasional defective tire slips through. But 2? Or is a non-defective Pro One that hard to inflate and seal? They sure were hard to mount compared to the One's, which mounted pretty easily just by hand. With the Pro One's I had to resort to the bead jack. Would that extra stiffness/tightness make it hard to inflate, or is it possible they were both defective? If a 'normal' Pro One is that stubborn about inflating I guess I'm done with them; the other problem is that One's are impossible to find.
Anyone have experience with other tubeless brands? I hate to go back to tubes
Thanks Robert!I didn't have any problems with my Pro Ones, but I'm still on the first set (about 2500 miles in). I am going to swap them out for new ones sometime soon, I will let you know if any problems come up.
I just purchased a new set of Pro One tubless for my new disc wheel build, Pacenti rims mated to Industry Nine Torch CX rims. The Pro Ones mounted and inflated without a hitch. I also had a set with no issues mounted on my cheap DT Swiss rims.Well so far I'm not a fan of the Pro One's. After I had a spoke to break for no apparent reason, and had to redo the rim tape after replacing it and then getting both wheels trued/spokes re-tensioned, I thought it would be a good time to replace the 28mm One's with 28mm Pro One's. Even though the One's really showed no signs of wear they have 2400+ miles on them so off they came. The first Pro One inflated ok with the air compressor but leaked at one spot; the other one wouldn't even begin to inflate. So I put tubes in to mate them with the rims, went for a short ride and the first one was obviously defective---severely out of round. No wonder it leaked. Tried again to inflate the other one without a tube in it--nothing doing. So I put the old One's back on and they inflated just with a standard floor pump. I think they'll do for now.
The question is, did I get 2 defective Pro One's? I can understand getting one just by chance, not even Schwalbe is perfect, and I guess an occasional defective tire slips through. But 2? Or is a non-defective Pro One that hard to inflate and seal? They sure were hard to mount compared to the One's, which mounted pretty easily just by hand. With the Pro One's I had to resort to the bead jack. Would that extra stiffness/tightness make it hard to inflate, or is it possible they were both defective? If a 'normal' Pro One is that stubborn about inflating I guess I'm done with them; the other problem is that One's are impossible to find.
Anyone have experience with other tubeless brands? I hate to go back to tubes
went for a short ride and the first one was obviously defective---severely out of round. No wonder it leaked. Tried again to inflate the other one without a tube in it--nothing doing. So I put the old One's back on and they inflated just with a standard floor pump. I think they'll do for now.