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Old 09-08-12 | 08:26 AM
  #52  
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rekmeyata
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Joined: Sep 2010
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From: NE Indiana

Bikes: 2020 Masi Giramondo 700c; 2013 Lynskey Peloton; 1992 Giant Rincon; 1989 Dawes needs parts; 1985 Trek 660; 1985 Fuji Club; 1984 Schwinn Voyager; 1984 Miyata 612; 1977 Raleigh Competition GS

Originally Posted by dddd
This was the patch from the other day, Park brand.

Note that the other 3 corners had the same creeping failure, but I pressed on the patch which appears to have re-bonded those failed areas.
Notice also that the tube was buffed fully to flat black, down to the rubber, and that the freshly-peeled patch was repeatedly pressed on with real pressure.

The failures all started at the corners and worked towards the hole, which was not as big of a hole as appears here. A complete failure with air loss did not yet occur, yet from past experience I decided to have a look.
Tugging at one of the corners that I pressed back down shows that a re-bonding has occurred, yet the adhesion doesn't hold up to being inflated in the tire for a few hours.

Note also that this tube measures 26mm wide in a flattened state, fitted into a tire that was nearly, but not quite 27mm inflated width. This is a very normal, middle-of-the-road width ratio for high-performance road bike tubes/tires.

But this is all BS, I'm from the stupid generation, I wiped my forehead with the sticky side of the patch, blah, blah, blah.


I can tell by looking at the patch you did it wrong!! If you notice the darker center area, that area you pressed on hard for about 30 seconds, but you didn't do that to the corners and edges properly so you got the frosty look because you didn't press it there. This is entirely a preparation failure. When I'm done with my patching they never look like that, they look black across the entire patch.
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