I'm Tired of Getting Flat Tires :(
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I'm Tired of Getting Flat Tires :(
I'm just here to vent.
Spend most of my time riding indoors so at least I don't get a flat doing that. But in my last 99.5 hours of riding outside on the road I've had five flats or one flat every 20 hours of riding. This seems excessive. After flat #4 I made the mistake of getting a GP5000 to replace the stock Bontrager tire that had a gash in it. It was a pain to install and a pain to take off after the inevitable flat #5 today.
Anyone have worse luck?
/End Vent
Spend most of my time riding indoors so at least I don't get a flat doing that. But in my last 99.5 hours of riding outside on the road I've had five flats or one flat every 20 hours of riding. This seems excessive. After flat #4 I made the mistake of getting a GP5000 to replace the stock Bontrager tire that had a gash in it. It was a pain to install and a pain to take off after the inevitable flat #5 today.
Anyone have worse luck?
/End Vent
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Why did you pick the GP5000? It is not known for being very flat resistant. I ride them an seldom have punctures but that is more the conditions I ride in, not the tire. If you want to stay with tubes and Continental GP 4 Season or Gatorbacks are more puncture resistant. I sure most are going to tell you to go tubeless.
#3
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3, 2, 1 ...
cue up the TL crowd :-)
Imo, just get some protected tyres and stop worrying about endless flats and supposed "suppleness" of race day tyres.
cue up the TL crowd :-)
Imo, just get some protected tyres and stop worrying about endless flats and supposed "suppleness" of race day tyres.
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Why did you pick the GP5000? It is not known for being very flat resistant. I ride them an seldom have punctures but that is more the conditions I ride in, not the tire. If you want to stay with tubes and Continental GP 4 Season or Gatorbacks are more puncture resistant. I sure most are going to tell you to go tubeless.
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Why did you pick the GP5000? It is not known for being very flat resistant. I ride them an seldom have punctures but that is more the conditions I ride in, not the tire. If you want to stay with tubes and Continental GP 4 Season or Gatorbacks are more puncture resistant. I sure most are going to tell you to go tubeless.
The GP5000 got me a whopping 30 hours before I got a flat! It's a beast of a tire compared to the stock tire. Maybe I'll look into getting the GP 4 Season. Or maybe I'll try to get a tire that's not as much of a pain to mount as the Continental tires. The stock Bontragers at least could be taken on and off by hand.
Last edited by guachi; 03-10-21 at 08:41 PM.
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If you do not mind, whereabouts are you riding? Urban sprawl? Desert? etc
What is causing your flats?
What is causing your flats?
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I haven't been serious about riding until recently but none of the riding seems unusual. Certainly not much different than the riding I did as a kid or through college when I had no car.
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Metal is deadly no matter what but two flats on rocks? I have never had that issue on Gatorskins, Bontrager T1's or Armadillos.
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Flat #1 was on a paved MUP at an intersection of the MUP and a lightly traveled subdivision road. Flat #2 I ran over a screw on a heavily traveled road near home. The roads are basically never swept so no real surprise. Flat #3 I went over a curb from a dead stop. Probably a pinch flat. Flat #4 I hit a small rock on a MUP that's packed dirt so is probably more appropriate on gravel tires though I've ridden up and down it at least a dozen times before with no incidence. Gashed tire and needed replacing. Flat #5 I hit the only small rock on a stretch of otherwise new and perfect asphalt. The kind you dream about, just minus the rock. The tube had two small holes that look like someone had driven a staple through it.
I haven't been serious about riding until recently but none of the riding seems unusual. Certainly not much different than the riding I did as a kid or through college when I had no car.
I haven't been serious about riding until recently but none of the riding seems unusual. Certainly not much different than the riding I did as a kid or through college when I had no car.
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I agree, sounds like your pressure is too low, you shouldn't be flatting on rocks or low speed curb impacts. I've done over 1,000 hours on GP5000s without a single flat.
What your weight, tire size, and pressure?
What your weight, tire size, and pressure?
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Agree with the comments about checking your psi
I've had great luck with Continental Gatorskins at lower pressures (60-80psi for 28s) but I weigh 150ish
If you don't mind the weight penalty, those Mr Tuffy or Slime tire liners are bulletproof and can be added to your favorite tire. I once pulled out a nasty goat head thorn which was stopped in its tracks by the liner.
Using the Gatorskins I stopped using the liners as they were noticeably heavier to me.
I've had great luck with Continental Gatorskins at lower pressures (60-80psi for 28s) but I weigh 150ish
If you don't mind the weight penalty, those Mr Tuffy or Slime tire liners are bulletproof and can be added to your favorite tire. I once pulled out a nasty goat head thorn which was stopped in its tracks by the liner.
Using the Gatorskins I stopped using the liners as they were noticeably heavier to me.
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Also, check to make sure the inside of your rim isn't damaged and that your rim tape hasn't shifted. You will know if you have these issues if the flats occur on the non-road side of the tubes.
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I'm 5' 11" and weigh 195 (plus weight of whatever I'm wearing/carrying). I checked and inflated my tires before the ride (and most rides) and the front was 75psi and the rear 85psi on 32mm tries on 21mm rims. It's possible the gauge is off. It's certainly not an expensive pump.
#15
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IMO, won't do any harm to try a heavier duty tire with thicker sidewall and puncture protection. You'll loose a bit of speed and gain a bit of weight. Also Check what the minimum ideal pressure rating for your tires is on the sidewall and max and get your tires somewhere in between. That or try and see potential debris before going over them.
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To the OP, more air pressure.
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I'm 5' 11" and weigh 195 (plus weight of whatever I'm wearing/carrying). I checked and inflated my tires before the ride (and most rides) and the front was 75psi and the rear 85psi on 32mm tries on 21mm rims. It's possible the gauge is off. It's certainly not an expensive pump.
And could you comment on your rim tape set up? When you had those flats from rocks did you analyze the exact location of the puncture(s)?
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More pressure to avoid pinch flatting. If you still get an unacceptable amount of debris punctures after that, consider tubeless.
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I'm 5' 11" and weigh 195 (plus weight of whatever I'm wearing/carrying). I checked and inflated my tires before the ride (and most rides) and the front was 75psi and the rear 85psi on 32mm tries on 21mm rims. It's possible the gauge is off. It's certainly not an expensive pump.
https://www.amazon.com/Topeak-601000...s%2C158&sr=8-2
Or it could be as others have suggested, an issue on the rim side, should check the tape, see if there's anything poking through the could be causing the flats.
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32s on 21mm inside should not be a problem. My Domane came standard with that size rim and 32s. OP has been running too low of pressure for that setup.
#21
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...which is probably why you keep flatting all the time: Ease of on/off is a good indicator that a tire is extremely supple...and you can't have an extremely supple tire that is also extremely resistant to punctures, gashes, tears, and holes.
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I think that bead tightness/diameter plays a bigger role, these days. The GP5k have a reputation for having tight beads, which can make a tire a chore to get on/off regardless of whether or not it's supple.
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I picked the GP5000 because it got good reviews as a tire and I figured I couldn't possibly continue to be that unlucky. But, nope, I hit the only rock on otherwise perfect asphalt.
The GP5000 got me a whopping 30 hours before I got a flat! It's a beast of a tire compared to the stock tire. Maybe I'll look into getting the GP 4 Season. Or maybe I'll try to get a tire that's not as much of a pain to mount as the Continental tires. The stock Bontragers at least could be taken on and off by hand.
The GP5000 got me a whopping 30 hours before I got a flat! It's a beast of a tire compared to the stock tire. Maybe I'll look into getting the GP 4 Season. Or maybe I'll try to get a tire that's not as much of a pain to mount as the Continental tires. The stock Bontragers at least could be taken on and off by hand.
I havnt had any issues with my GP5. The main road that I am on is prone to gravel and rocks from driveways spilling out on the road. Maybe it’s your rim? Is it always the same wheel?
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On my road bike I have GP4000IIS 25mm. Once went 18 months, that's about 8000 miles without a flat and actually wore the rear to the wear marks. The next season I got 2 flats in the same week.. go figure.
On my CX bike, which I ride in the winter, I have 5000 miles miles and not a single flat. Tires are Bontrager AW2 Hardcase 32mm tubeless.
You can minimize flats by getting a tire liner, using thorn resistant tubes and all selecting tires that are puncture resistant. All of these add rotational weight so there is a performance penalty.
In warmer weather I rather the better performance since fixing a flat on the side of the road is only a 5 minute delay. In the winter I really don't want to fix a flat in 25* weather with wet roads and snow on the sides.
On my CX bike, which I ride in the winter, I have 5000 miles miles and not a single flat. Tires are Bontrager AW2 Hardcase 32mm tubeless.
You can minimize flats by getting a tire liner, using thorn resistant tubes and all selecting tires that are puncture resistant. All of these add rotational weight so there is a performance penalty.
In warmer weather I rather the better performance since fixing a flat on the side of the road is only a 5 minute delay. In the winter I really don't want to fix a flat in 25* weather with wet roads and snow on the sides.
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You have to figure out why your are flatting. Not every flat is a puncture from something on the road. Many can be the tube got damaged during installation and it took a few miles for it to finally give out.
You might be in an area where flats from road debris is an issue. I can't help you. I ride in an area where flats from such are few. I fully expect to wear my GP5000's out before I get a flat. So far there is over 3000 miles on the current set.
You might be in an area where flats from road debris is an issue. I can't help you. I ride in an area where flats from such are few. I fully expect to wear my GP5000's out before I get a flat. So far there is over 3000 miles on the current set.
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