nobrakes
Well-Known Member
I'll probably go back to tubes for now. I've straightened the rim as best I can and tidied it up, but I'm sure it won't be 100% perfect so I wouldn't trust another tubeless tyre even if it did inflate. The other option is to get the wheel rebuilt with a new rim but I think it's easier to go back to tubes for now, this crash is causing me some serious financial pain already!
I'm going to put Duranos on until the worst of the weather is out the way and the roads get a bit cleaner. I've just ordered a new left hand Force 22 brifter and I'm waiting on Garmin getting back to me about my options for either a blank for the left pedal or whatever else is possible. New bar tape is ready and waiting for the brifter. I'll keep the old one as a reminder to myself as to why lightweight carbon components are not going to feature on my shopping list for any future builds. Just too fragile. Back to Shimano SPD pedals for now.
I don't think I had quite realised what a blowout meant on a tubeless tyre - the mess was substantial and I was completely unable to get the tyre to seat properly to try and blow it back up. I did have tyre levers, emergency tube etc with me so I could have got going again if I really had to, but after 30 minutes in low temperature with significant wind chill (I was soaked through after a rain storm as well), I was starting to think that I had to get somewhere warm before my core temperature dropped too much. Lucky I was quite close to home and was able to hail a ride.
In 18 months and around 7000 miles I've had 2 snakebites on tubed tyres (both times on Kojaks), and both were fixed with a spare inside 15 minutes with no mess or fuss. It's this side that is appealing to me again right now. The mess on a tubeless blowout is not something I had considered. I'll ride tubes again for a while and see how I feel about it in a few months.
I was thinking about this crash again last night. I wondered if I could have done anything different but I think it was just the luck of the draw. I wasn't pushing the envelope or riding stupidly. I am aware that my skills on the V are not on a par with my ability to throw the Fuego around yet, so I was taking it easy on the bits where I felt I had to. Short of riding really slowly I'm nor sure there's anything else I could have done.
I'm going to put Duranos on until the worst of the weather is out the way and the roads get a bit cleaner. I've just ordered a new left hand Force 22 brifter and I'm waiting on Garmin getting back to me about my options for either a blank for the left pedal or whatever else is possible. New bar tape is ready and waiting for the brifter. I'll keep the old one as a reminder to myself as to why lightweight carbon components are not going to feature on my shopping list for any future builds. Just too fragile. Back to Shimano SPD pedals for now.
I don't think I had quite realised what a blowout meant on a tubeless tyre - the mess was substantial and I was completely unable to get the tyre to seat properly to try and blow it back up. I did have tyre levers, emergency tube etc with me so I could have got going again if I really had to, but after 30 minutes in low temperature with significant wind chill (I was soaked through after a rain storm as well), I was starting to think that I had to get somewhere warm before my core temperature dropped too much. Lucky I was quite close to home and was able to hail a ride.
In 18 months and around 7000 miles I've had 2 snakebites on tubed tyres (both times on Kojaks), and both were fixed with a spare inside 15 minutes with no mess or fuss. It's this side that is appealing to me again right now. The mess on a tubeless blowout is not something I had considered. I'll ride tubes again for a while and see how I feel about it in a few months.
I was thinking about this crash again last night. I wondered if I could have done anything different but I think it was just the luck of the draw. I wasn't pushing the envelope or riding stupidly. I am aware that my skills on the V are not on a par with my ability to throw the Fuego around yet, so I was taking it easy on the bits where I felt I had to. Short of riding really slowly I'm nor sure there's anything else I could have done.