Commuting - tire boot: emergency only?

Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.
I noticed a bulge in my tire after changing the tube after a nice sharp sliver of glass punctured it. The tube was poking out like a hernia, so I took it to the LBS and the guy suggested a tire boot. It says "emergency only," meaning I have to buy a new tire, right? I don't have 20, 30 dollars for that right now. Can't I just ride on it. I mean, the boot was something like $1.50 and it's this really nice, sturdy looking plastic.
Any dangers there? Like catastrophic blowout or something?
max-a-mill
01-14-05, 06:17 AM
just keep looking at the spot where the tear is... if you notice it getting bigger i'd definitely get a new tire.
if it stays the same size and the "boot" seems to be holding strong i'd get my moneys worth outta the rubber and keep right on riding. definitely something your gonna have to keep an eye on though!
powers2b
01-14-05, 07:03 AM
I rode a century (on many semi-improved roads) with a guy that had a mylar granola bar wrapper booting his tire.
Last time I rode with him he had the same tire/boot setup and it seemed fine.
You can ride it until you can get a new tire...but I suggest the booted tire stay on the rear wheel.
enjoy
moxfyre
01-14-05, 07:13 AM
A large, thick tube patch applied to the inside of the tire around the tear can work pretty well. At least it did for me!
The classic boot is to use a dollar bill. Never tried this 'cause I'm too cheap.
I've used Duct Tape to boot a tire that was practically cut in half to the bead. Finished my week-long fully-loaded tour with no problems. Always carry duct tape! I wrap a foot of it around my zip-stick tire tool. Using a foot of duct tape will make a better boot. ;-)
Good idea to put the booted tire on the back, powers2be.
cyccommute
01-14-05, 08:06 AM
The classic boot is to use a dollar bill. Never tried this 'cause I'm too cheap.
I've used Duct Tape to boot a tire that was practically cut in half to the bead. Finished my week-long fully-loaded tour with no problems. Always carry duct tape! I wrap a foot of it around my zip-stick tire tool. Using a foot of duct tape will make a better boot. ;-)
Good idea to put the booted tire on the back, powers2be.
Nature Valley Granola bar wrappers are by far the best boot material made (outside of a piece of tire). They have a paper layer, a tough plastic lay and an inner foil layer. If I could figure out how to vulcanize tread to them, I use them for tire casings :D ! And the granola bars aren't too bad either. Better than power bars, especially at 12,000 feet.
Stuart Black
bostontrevor
01-14-05, 08:19 AM
Tyvek (like those rugged USPS/UPS/FedEx/etc envelopes) has been suggested in another forum.
Just watch for tire separation.
Buy a cheap tire for the time being.
MichaelW
01-14-05, 10:02 AM
If you are on a student style budget, you can often scavenge usable tyres from discarded bikes. Keep a lookout for skip/dumpster finds.
iowarose
01-14-05, 10:09 AM
I've used the dollar-bill boot and it works. I'm cheap too, but you gotta use what you have on the road. A five dollar bill, on the other hand...
BostonFixed
01-14-05, 11:52 AM
Here is my tire boot!
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21585
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21586
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21587
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21588
Its lasted a week now,commuting on it. I haven't died yet!
cyccommute
01-14-05, 11:59 AM
Here is my tire boot!
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21585
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21586
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21587
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21588
Its lasted a week now,commuting on it. I haven't died yet!
Bet the brakes are good and sticky :rolleyes:
moxfyre
01-14-05, 12:16 PM
Here is my tire boot!
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21585
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21586
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21587
http://www.bikeforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=21588
Its lasted a week now,commuting on it. I haven't died yet!
Haha nice, I hope you have disc brakes :P
Bet its on a fixed, no brake.
Dchiefransom
01-14-05, 09:32 PM
I use the Park self stick tire boots. I haven't had any problems. If you want to peel them off and actually glue a tube patch in there, that will really hold it. I've actually only used one boot, but I've run through quite a few on club rides, and the people still have them inside until they buy new tires, sometimes for over a thousand miles.
jimhens714
01-14-05, 11:58 PM
Park boots work great. What works even better if you have it with you is to Superglue the tire casing cut closed again then use a boot. This is assuming it is a nice clean straight glass cut and not too big. Obviously doesn't work with tears in rotten tires or huge cuts.
The classic boot is to use a dollar bill. Never tried this 'cause I'm too cheap.
I've used Duct Tape to boot a tire that was practically cut in half to the bead. Finished my week-long fully-loaded tour with no problems. Always carry duct tape! I wrap a foot of it around my zip-stick tire tool. Using a foot of duct tape will make a better boot. ;-)
Good idea to put the booted tire on the back, powers2be.
A foot is all you have? :eek:
I carry an old plastic gift card (think credit card) wound around the middle until it's over a half inch thick with duct tape.
Done it many times on tours. Duct tape, plastic, or an old chunk of rubber. I'm the same way. Cheap. And as long as it holds, keep riding. It makes for a great short story!
Rogerinchrist
01-15-05, 07:37 PM
A foot is all you have? :eek:
I carry an old plastic gift card (think credit card) wound around the middle until it's over a half inch thick with duct tape.
Does having more duct tape allow you to travel farther from home?
I've used duct tape to boot the inside with success also, actually had the bulge before leaving on a tour, then "repaired it" after it blew out. Haven't seen it used on the outside of the tire until this thread. Whatever works is a good motto.
I agree with the others......... ride it on the rear (with some sort of boot) until you can afford a new skin.
A foot is all you have? :eek:
I carry an old plastic gift card (think credit card) wound around the middle until it's over a half inch thick with duct tape.
...foot....boot...
Maybe this belongs in the humor column...or not!
Anything cylindrical is a good spool for some duct tape. I mentioned my zip stick tire tool. All my backpacking bottles have some duct tape around them.
If you can't fix it, duck it!
A fellow rider on one of our rides managed to get a puncture through his Gatorskins that also went through his Mr. Tuffy liner. Unfortunately, there were no bike shops that were open that Sunday on Whidby Island. We ended up overlapping sections of the liner on top of the puncture to create a makeshift boot. It worked well enough for the 20-mile return trip. However, there was still a noticable bulge.
http://www.neebu.net/~khuon/albums/whidbey_island-20040516/PICT0083.jpg
so just for the sake of history, the boot lasted for about two months, then cracked to death.
Why bother? Just go to Nashbar and get the cheapest tires they offer until you can afford to get some good tires. I've gotten the tire boot, but after a while, it wears down. I was riding a lot, so it wore down pretty quickly and interfered with my rides. I was so damn glad to get a new tire by then. I have a spare tire just in case. I will never do the spare tire boot again.
Koffee
Tyvek (like those rugged USPS/UPS/FedEx/etc envelopes) has been suggested in another forum.
Just watch for tire separation.
The top part of some of these envelopes are self adhesive. You can cut these off & keep a couple with your patch kit. When you need it, cut it to fit, and remove the adhesive. Helps the boot stay in place when re-mounting your tire and pumping the tube.
I've also used a little bit of super glue gel along tire cuts (and squeez them closed), with a boot inside(I now keep a tube in my tool kit).
I'd also change out the tire as soon as I could.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.12 Copyright © 2013 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.