View Poll Results: Do you fix a flat tire or just use a new inner tube?
I immediately use a new inner-tube.



38
61.29%
I fix the flat tire, but only ride on it until I get home then put on a new inner-tube.



2
3.23%
I fix the flat tire, and go on subsequent rides with it.



22
35.48%
Voters: 62. You may not vote on this poll
Do you fix flat tires or just use a new inner-tube?
#1
Thread Starter
They see me rollin'
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 784
Likes: 1
From: Los Angeles
Bikes: 2005 Cannondale T2000
Do you fix flat tires or just use a new inner-tube?
I was wondering how many of you bother to fix flat tires instead of just using a new inner-tube. I've read a lot about how to fix flats (sand the area, put on the glue, put on the patch, etc.) so it seems like some people do this. Whenever I get a flat, I always replace the tube on the spot and throw the old one away.
#3
When I got tubes on sale for $2, I replaced them (also I was getting rid of slime tubes anyway, which aren't patchable when they come apart). I figured I'd continue to replace them, but then I found out the regular price is like $5... so last flat I had I patched. Also I got it when I was nearly at home, so I just walked home and was able to work on the bike in my basement. Had I been changing it on the side of the road, I probably would have just replaced the tube. And if I replace the tube, I'm throwing out the old one. I'm not going to swap tubes again when I get home, and I'm not going to carry a tube with an untested patch as a spare.
#4
None of the options really apply to me. I put a new tube in (if it's a side-of-the-road job) then patch the old one when I get home and put it back in my saddle bag for the next flat. I'll keep swapping until the patched tubes stop holding air as well as a new one.
#6
Senior Member
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 204
Likes: 0
use slime tubes...they fix themselves! I have had 3 times when it sounded like somebody depressed the air valve and within seconds it was sealed and I kept on truckin! I figure once the tube stops fixing itself I will replace it since it will probably be out of slime.
#8
why throw them away? THey are still good, and a patch only makes one spot stronger.
I keep one or two extra tubes handy on rides, if I get a flat I use the extra tube to roll me home. At home i fix the tube and use that as the spare.
I keep one or two extra tubes handy on rides, if I get a flat I use the extra tube to roll me home. At home i fix the tube and use that as the spare.
__________________
C://dos
C://dos.run
run.dos.run
C://dos
C://dos.run
run.dos.run
#10
Senior Member
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 180
Likes: 0
From: Chicago-ish
Bikes: specialized hardrock pro 2003
Originally Posted by Noif666
None of the options really apply to me. I put a new tube in (if it's a side-of-the-road job) then patch the old one when I get home and put it back in my saddle bag for the next flat. I'll keep swapping until the patched tubes stop holding air as well as a new one.
#11
Originally Posted by Noif666
None of the options really apply to me. I put a new tube in (if it's a side-of-the-road job) then patch the old one when I get home and put it back in my saddle bag for the next flat. I'll keep swapping until the patched tubes stop holding air as well as a new one.
#12
Senior Member

Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,925
Likes: 74
From: Tucson, AZ
Bikes: 2025 Enve Fray with SRAM Rival, 1984 Trek 720 with a Nexus hub, 2016 Cannondale Synapse
I carry 2 tubes on the bike. They often have several patches each. WHen I flat on a ride, I replace the tube and patch the flat one when I get home.
My record so far is 6 patches on one tube. That tubes failed when I pulled the stem out of it because my pump head stuck on the valve.
My record so far is 6 patches on one tube. That tubes failed when I pulled the stem out of it because my pump head stuck on the valve.
#13
Spoked to Death
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,335
Likes: 1
From: Boulder, CO
Bikes: Salsa La Cruz w/ Alfine 8, Specialized Fuse Pro 27.5+, Surly 1x1
Throw away a perfectly good tube?!? I've been known to pick up other people's tubes, patch them, and then get a free tube! 1.50$ for a patch kit will yield me 6 'new' tubes. Try to beat that price with your 'sales'. I've got a few tubes running with more than 5 patches, that have been in the bike for about 8 years without trouble.
I only throw a tube away if it has an unpatchable hole, like a tear. Sometimes seam holes can be touchy to patch, too.
peace,
sam
I only throw a tube away if it has an unpatchable hole, like a tear. Sometimes seam holes can be touchy to patch, too.
peace,
sam
#14
Senior Member


Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 502
Likes: 1
From: Missouri
Bikes: 14' Colnago CLD, 02' Schwinn Mesa GSX, 2005 Giant OCR2
Since I have learned that patching tubes and tires hold and work well, I have been patching both. I had a problem with Conti Gatorskins getting holes in the sidewalls, but I have been using Park Emergency Tire Boots for the smaller ones and they work great. I heard you can even put a dollar bill or power bar wrappers in there and they work, although I have not tried it yet.
#15
B*ck From Th* D**d
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,527
Likes: 8
From: Lower Mainland, BC
Bikes: 2015 Kona Process 153
Where I bike there is a guy across the street who fixes them for free for me and my friends. But it's not te greatest pacth job so we always get new inner tubes in a about 3 days after. I get all ny stuff from the
shop just down a couple of streets.
HTML Code:
<BLINK>Norco<BLINK>
#16
Prefers Cicero

Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 12,860
Likes: 146
From: Toronto
Bikes: 1984 Trek 520; 2007 Bike Friday NWT; misc others
On the one hand, I disagree with the notion that it's a "bother" to patch a tube. I got a flat the other day, and the shard of glass sticking out of the tire told me where to find the hole in the tube. I pulled out that section of tube without even having to remove the rear wheel from the bike, and slapped a patch on in under 5 min, and got to work in time. I would have been even faster but it was my first time inflating a tire with a Presta valve with my mini pump, and I had to take the pump head apart and study it to see how to make it work.
On the other hand, I don't find patches reliable. Maybe it was an old patch that didn't adhere well, or maybe it was that this one time I forgot to roll it in my fingers to really seal it down although I did press tightly, but in any event, at the end of the day it was flat again so I walked to an LBS, got a new tube and put it on before riding home.
Robert
On the other hand, I don't find patches reliable. Maybe it was an old patch that didn't adhere well, or maybe it was that this one time I forgot to roll it in my fingers to really seal it down although I did press tightly, but in any event, at the end of the day it was flat again so I walked to an LBS, got a new tube and put it on before riding home.
Robert
#17
Tiocfáidh ár Lá

Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 5,483
Likes: 132
From: The edge of b#
Bikes: A whole bunch-a bikes.
I can never seem to get patches to stick on. So I never use them anymore. I do bring a patch kit if worse comes to worse though. The glue in the tubes gets hard over time too. I hate patches!
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
I buy a new patch kit every year no matter what. That way, I don't have to worry about the glue hardening (thanks to Joe Gardner's story years back about giving away his last inner tube, only to get a flat and finding out his glue was hardened!).
Koffee
Koffee
#19
Originally Posted by kritter
use slime tubes...they fix themselves! I have had 3 times when it sounded like somebody depressed the air valve and within seconds it was sealed and I kept on truckin! I figure once the tube stops fixing itself I will replace it since it will probably be out of slime.
#22
Huachuca Rider

Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 4,275
Likes: 0
From: Charlotte, NC
Bikes: Fuji CCR1, Specialized Roubaix
Originally Posted by Noif666
None of the options really apply to me. I put a new tube in (if it's a side-of-the-road job) then patch the old one when I get home and put it back in my saddle bag for the next flat. I'll keep swapping until the patched tubes stop holding air as well as a new one.
__________________
Just Peddlin' Around
Just Peddlin' Around
#23
I find patching a tube such a brain-dead simple task that it's more hassle to replace it with a new tube then stow the big, floppy used tube somewhere to patch it at home. I only carry the spare tube if the punctured tube turns out impossible to repair.
I don't like throwing out old tubes as it generates unnecessary garbage.
I don't like throwing out old tubes as it generates unnecessary garbage.
#24
Banned.
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 4,416
Likes: 1
I think my record is 12 patches on one tube. I even patched a hole on the valve stem (schrader valve tube), and then I drilled the valve hole on my rim larger so that the patched valve stem could go through. Then I had a blowout, so I couldn't patch that. Blownout tubes are made into rubber bands for all kinds of uses.




