Kevlar Lined Tires
Does anyone have the kevlar lining between the inner tube and the tire? If so, does it work?
Thanks. |
A friend of mine said that over time the Kevlar in his began to disintegrate due to moisture. At that price I wouldn't pay for something that doesn't last.
I use the flexible plastic ones. They're heavy, but for my purposes (commuting) they're more than adequate. I ride over lots of glass on my commute and I haven't had a puncture flat yet, though I've only had 'em 2 weeks. |
Here's the sum total of my experience with Mr Tuffy tire liners being ridden on Philadelphia's glassy, trashy streets:
With Mr Tuffy: Bike 1 (Specialized Nimbus EX 700x35c tires). No flats at all while I owned the bike, and no flats at all since I sold it to my office mate. Total of maybe 4000 miles. Bike 2 (Avocet Cross K, 700x32c). No flats at all over more than 6000 miles. Without Mr Tuffy: Bike 3 (Continental Top Touring 2000, 700x32). No flats at all, over 5000 miles, same routes as Bike 2. Bike 2 again (Specialized Nimbus EX 700x35c, another pair, replaced the Avocets and this time I left the liners out). 2000 miles, no flats. Bike 3 again (Panaracer Pasela TG, 700x32c, replaced the Contis). Two flats, one a puncture and one pinch flat, in about 1000 miles. Conclusion: it's the tire, not the liner. YMMV. RichC |
I've been using Slime liners in my Michelin Cyclocross Sprint tires. I haven't had a flat in 5000 miles. Flats were a somewhat regualr occurance prior to installation.
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Specialized offers several kevlar belted tires in the thirty dollar range. They are very tough and have a pinch resistant side wall as well. I have heard of customers getting more than 6000 miles out of them with no failures.
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I use Mr. tuffys and yes they work.
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Originally posted by Repp5 A friend of mine said that over time the Kevlar in his began to disintegrate due to moisture. At that price I wouldn't pay for something that doesn't last. As Rich mentioned, it may be the tire, but it may also be the liner, or it may be both. . . I'm just afraid to narrow it down so I use the combination. |
Bought a new Cannondale last spring ... two punctures in first three months.
Switched to Continental "Gator Skins" ... none since. ( No liners used.) :D |
Have used both Specialized Armadillos and Performance Pro Kevlar belted tires for the past five years and have had two flats. One was a rock cut on the unbelted sidewall which I repaired with a dollar bill to get home and the other was a pinch flat from a larger stone (like the one that cut the sidewall). Both were last year along the same section of road where the was a bunch of spilled riprap rock. I no longer ride that road. In over 8K miles I have had these two flats. Nothing like kevlar belted tires for the road.
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As Chuck mentioned, the Specialized tires are excellent. We've got a good amount of customers on those with no complaints. I've also had good luck with the Conti Gator Skins and am personally 500 miles into a trial of the new Kendas (185g with kevlar belt)-no flats and the tires are holding up great.
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Interesting thread....
A friend of mine said that over time the Kevlar in his began to disintegrate due to moisture. Perhaps this explains the blowouts I have experienced with Hutchinson Excels. The rear tire has always failed as a result of casing failure at the sidewall, just away from the bead. I posted on this a couple of days ago http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...tchinson+excel Maybe the journeys in wet weather & winter salted roads are contributing to the problem. To answer the question, I do find that the kevlar tires (about £15 here) are much better in resisting flats than a similar "basic" tire costing £12 or so. EDIT .......Sorry, should have read the post more carefully and then I would realise this was about tire liners. My goof! Cheers, Ed |
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D'oh, I missed that too Ed. |
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