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Why Do I Flat All The Time?

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Road Cycling “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” -- Ernest Hemingway

Why Do I Flat All The Time?

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Old 08-28-11 | 01:46 PM
  #26  
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From: Roanoke

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Originally Posted by banerjek
The whole point of inspecting the tube is to know what caused the flat. Until you know, you can never be sure the same exact thing won't cause another flat.
Exactly. Inspecting the old tube is step 1. Without finding where the hole is, you'll never know if it was a failed rimstrip or something small stuck in the tire.
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Old 08-28-11 | 02:03 PM
  #27  
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Originally Posted by sharp
.... Why do I always flat on the rear and never on the front? My guess is because the rear is carrying more of the load?
This has been observed a lot on the motorized bicycle forums I frequent.

On most (gas) motorized bikes, the engine-drive wheel is usually the rear wheel. Most of the time when someone gets a flat it is almost always the rear tire--which is especially charming since the rear tire is a much bigger bother to deal with than the front, due to the extra drive mechanism on the rear wheel.

The prevailing theory is that because the rear tire has torque applied to it, when you run over a sharp object laying oblong on the road surface the tire's slippage pulls the top of the sharp object backwards a bit, so that it stands up and then it pokes into the tire.
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Old 08-28-11 | 05:45 PM
  #28  
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Try avoiding running over every little piece of debris. Try not riding straight into evry pot hole , crack or pavement imperfection. Dont ride in the gutter, dont ride in the debris field from motorized traffic. Learn to bunny hop.
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Old 08-28-11 | 06:19 PM
  #29  
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Originally Posted by Doug5150
This has been observed a lot on the motorized bicycle forums I frequent.
The prevailing theory is that because the rear tire has torque applied to it, when you run over a sharp object laying oblong on the road surface the tire's slippage pulls the top of the sharp object backwards a bit, so that it stands up and then it pokes into the tire.
Now this makes total sense, especially with the mass amounts of power I'm putting to the rear wheel.
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