View Single Post
Old 10-03-07, 12:56 PM
  #2  
cyccommute 
Mad bike riding scientist
 
cyccommute's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 27,342

Bikes: Some silver ones, a red one, a black and orange one, and a few titanium ones

Mentioned: 152 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6200 Post(s)
Liked 4,201 Times in 2,357 Posts
Originally Posted by bernmart
As a rule I get very few flats. Never any pinch flats, despite the fact that I'm no lightweight. Two flats in the same week, one just before a century ride, have got me thinking about the flats I have gotten, and most of them seem to arise from defect in the tubes, not from road hazards.

More recently, the valve core came out when I took disconnected the pump head from the tire. Rear tire, with a group start on a century less than an hour away. The other day I got what seemed to be a "normal" flat, but when I took it to the lbs they found nothing in the tire, and just replaced what was apprently a faulty tube in the front tire.

What can I do to minimize this? To anticipate some questions, I've used a variety of brand tubes--Sepcialized, Performance, Nashbar--, and the flats seem evenly distributed between front and rear tires. I do use the screw on doohickeys that hold the stem in place in the rim, and valve caps.

Since there's no replacement for Presta tubes anytime soon, how can I maximize their lifespan, and might it be my fault and not the tubes or valves?
Prestas are pretty robust and not that easy to damage. When you take the pump head off, do you bend or twist the head to get it off? That's the way to bend the valve stem. As for flats, that's just a way of life. Check the tire for debris after a flat. The material that caused the flat may still be embedded in the tire and just lead to further flats. Try inspecting the tire from the outside too since the pokey bit may have pulled back into the casing.

You may also have something in the rim that is causing the flat. I had a bike that was plagued by flats but I could never find the cause. It turned out to be a small metal shaving in the rim strip.

Another trick is to alway put the tube into the tire in the same way. Line the valve stem up with the tire label and make the tube with left or right and always put it back the same way. If there is something that is causing flat after flat, this will help you track it down.
__________________
Stuart Black
Plan Epsilon Around Lake Michigan in the era of Covid
Old School…When It Wasn’t Ancient bikepacking
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!



cyccommute is offline