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This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the
sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? |
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This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the
sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? There's generally not enough material to support the load of a patch when the cut is low on the sidewall. A sidewall patch requires a fair amount of space on all sides, to spread out the stress and keep it from trying to blow back out through the hole. You need to examine the area closely to see what caused the failure, since a cut that low can sometimes be from a brake pad hitting the tire and wearing through it. It can also be an indication of riding on too-low air pressure or bottoming out the tire on a nasty bump (or a combination of the two). --Mike Jacoubowsky Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReaction.com IMBA, BikesBelong, NBDA member wrote in message ... This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? |
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On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 20:37:59 GMT, "Mike Jacoubowsky/Chain Reaction
Bicycles" wrote: This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? There's generally not enough material to support the load of a patch when the cut is low on the sidewall. A sidewall patch requires a fair amount of space on all sides, to spread out the stress and keep it from trying to blow back out through the hole. You need to examine the area closely to see what caused the failure, since a cut that low can sometimes be from a brake pad hitting the tire and wearing through it. It can also be an indication of riding on too-low air pressure or bottoming out the tire on a nasty bump (or a combination of the two). --Mike Jacoubowsky Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReaction.com IMBA, BikesBelong, NBDA member Thanks! I don't plan on reusing the tire since the casing appears rotted around the bead. The tube blew through the sidewall casing above the bead and rim. The rest of the sidewall appears weak and there is some dark stain on the inside of the casing as if rust from the bead had leeched through. I will patch and go on the tube. |
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On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 22:34:27 GMT, Werehatrack
wrote: On 31 Oct 2004 14:39:36 EST, wrote: This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Ah. Missed that "bad tire" note the first time. My advice: Patch, replace tire, and go, unless the tube is visibly distorted in the area to the point that it won't lay flat. -- Typoes are a feature, not a bug. Some gardening required to reply via email. Words processed in a facility that contains nuts. |
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On Mon, 01 Nov 2004 00:04:03 GMT, Werehatrack
wrote: On Sun, 31 Oct 2004 22:34:27 GMT, Werehatrack wrote: On 31 Oct 2004 14:39:36 EST, wrote: This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Ah. Missed that "bad tire" note the first time. When the tire blew out it almost looked like someone had sliced my sidewall to be mean since the tire was new. Apparantly this was NOS with the emphasis being on the word Old. They were obviously dry rotted from age around the beads and the seller should have thought twice before retailing them. My advice: Patch, replace tire, and go, unless the tube is visibly distorted in the area to the point that it won't lay flat. No visible distortion in the tube although it must have stretched some when it bubble gum burst out the sidewall. "Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent." -Isaac Asimov |
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On Mon, 08 Nov 2004 11:36:50 -0700, DB Rea wrote:
On 31 Oct 2004 14:39:36 EST, wrote: This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? Well yes and no. When I was a cheapskate college kid I "patched" a sidewall blowout with coaches tape, a.k.a. ankle tape. I just wrapped it around the tire, the rim, and everything. Ugly and out of balance, but this was a campus bike and it kept me going in an emergency kind of way until I had enough cash for an overpriced shiny new Schwinn tire from the local bleed'em-dry guy. Not a recommended permanent repair, but a fair idea for a "finish-the-ride" kit. cheers- Dan Rea I have patched this type blow by wrapping a short piece or tube around the tube where the cut in the side wall is. This supprts the tube and stops another blow out. It will be ugly and a bit out of balance and you have to be carefull of tire pressure but it will get you home. On the Around the Bay ride in Melbourne a few weeks ago a team mate had a blow out like this. I had packed a piece of tube about 10cm long in my repair kit. This got him to Queenscliffe, about 50 - 60 km, where he was able to buy a new tire. This was on a nearly new bike, only about 900km. The cut was right next to the bead. It appeared that the tire had cut by rubbing against the rim. This inside edge of the tube felt quite sharp near the cut tire. Another method of patching a cut tire is to use a short piece of old tire with bead cut off. Of course all this requires that you are carrying these things with you. On a long ride such as Around the BAy (210 km ) it pays to carry such things John Venables |
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![]() "John Venables" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 08 Nov 2004 11:36:50 -0700, DB Rea wrote: On 31 Oct 2004 14:39:36 EST, wrote: This morning my nice new thorn resistant tube blew out through the sidewall just above the bead of bad tire. Upon examination it looks like just an 1/8 inch tear in the tube. I read some place that patching a tube after a sidewall blow out is not a good idea since the surrounding rubber often has undergone extreme stress. There is no sign of chafing just the small tear from the burst. Anyone have any luck patching this kind of blow out? Well yes and no. When I was a cheapskate college kid I "patched" a sidewall blowout with coaches tape, a.k.a. ankle tape. I just wrapped it around the tire, the rim, and everything. Ugly and out of balance, but this was a campus bike and it kept me going in an emergency kind of way until I had enough cash for an overpriced shiny new Schwinn tire from the local bleed'em-dry guy. Not a recommended permanent repair, but a fair idea for a "finish-the-ride" kit. cheers- Dan Rea I have patched this type blow by wrapping a short piece or tube around the tube where the cut in the side wall is. This supprts the tube and stops another blow out. It will be ugly and a bit out of balance and you have to be carefull of tire pressure but it will get you home. On the Around the Bay ride in Melbourne a few weeks ago a team mate had a blow out like this. I had packed a piece of tube about 10cm long in my repair kit. This got him to Queenscliffe, about 50 - 60 km, where he was able to buy a new tire. This was on a nearly new bike, only about 900km. The cut was right next to the bead. It appeared that the tire had cut by rubbing against the rim. This inside edge of the tube felt quite sharp near the cut tire. Another method of patching a cut tire is to use a short piece of old tire with bead cut off. Of course all this requires that you are carrying these things with you. On a long ride such as Around the BAy (210 km ) it pays to carry such things John Venables I also had to be a cheapskate and patched tires on the inside with bits of sidewall from old tires. Rubber cement won't work. Use contact cement (can be found at a hardware store). Make sure the patch goes well beyond the cut. The trick I've heard of to get you home when you're not prepared for this is to wrap a dollar bill around the spare tube. Never tried it though. --Art |
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