I have thought about converting my main bike to tubeless for a while now, but never really had a reason too. Well that all changed over the weekend.
This was my front tire, the rear looked just the same:
These were all in the front tire:
Needless to say I found myself walking home.
So since I had to buy a couple tubes anyway, and I had a bottle of Stan's sealant that a buddy gave me. I decided to give tubeless a try. Or should I say "Ghetto Tubeless" or "Split Tube Tubeless".
So I started with a pair of 20" tubes. These i stretched over my 26" wheels, and once they were nice and straight, I cut the tube alone one of the seams. This is what I ended up with:
At this point I had a nice sealed rim, and a valve to fill the tire with.
Next, I mounted the tire. Notice that the split tube is sandwiched between the rim and the tire. This actually held air pretty good, but has tons of tiny leaks from when I pulled the thorns out.
Next, I pulled the valve core and put about 4 ounces of Stans sealant into the tire. I put the valve core back in and aired it up to about 35 psi. I went for about a mile ride and all the holes had sealed.
Once I was confident that there were no leaks, I trimmed off the excess tube, leaving just a little lip of tube, so that I can reuse the tube if I ever have to take this tire off.
Here they are mounted and aired up. I rode 20 miles yesterday on this setup and it seems great. Plus it took a half a pound off the bike. And if I get more thorns, I have sealant in the tire!
If you try this, make sure that you clean everything really well with soapy water. Including washing all the powder off that was inside the inner tube.
This was my front tire, the rear looked just the same:
These were all in the front tire:
Needless to say I found myself walking home.
So since I had to buy a couple tubes anyway, and I had a bottle of Stan's sealant that a buddy gave me. I decided to give tubeless a try. Or should I say "Ghetto Tubeless" or "Split Tube Tubeless".
So I started with a pair of 20" tubes. These i stretched over my 26" wheels, and once they were nice and straight, I cut the tube alone one of the seams. This is what I ended up with:
At this point I had a nice sealed rim, and a valve to fill the tire with.
Next, I mounted the tire. Notice that the split tube is sandwiched between the rim and the tire. This actually held air pretty good, but has tons of tiny leaks from when I pulled the thorns out.
Next, I pulled the valve core and put about 4 ounces of Stans sealant into the tire. I put the valve core back in and aired it up to about 35 psi. I went for about a mile ride and all the holes had sealed.
Once I was confident that there were no leaks, I trimmed off the excess tube, leaving just a little lip of tube, so that I can reuse the tube if I ever have to take this tire off.
Here they are mounted and aired up. I rode 20 miles yesterday on this setup and it seems great. Plus it took a half a pound off the bike. And if I get more thorns, I have sealant in the tire!
If you try this, make sure that you clean everything really well with soapy water. Including washing all the powder off that was inside the inner tube.