How to Tubeless your bicycle wheels for pennies
The Gallery is here.
Here's how to Al's HalfTubes a 26" mountain bike wheel.
It's exactly the same for a 700c wheel, just use a
26" mountian bike innertube! This works for
cyclocross wheels and 29er mountainbike wheels.
Ingredients
- BMX Innertubes - I use Schwalbe with presta valves. I
have to recommend Schwalbe because their Schraeder valves have
lock rings, and the lock rings on their Prestas have a collar
that sits inside Schraeder-drilled valve holes. Really nice
attention to detail, essential here because we need the lock
ring whatever type of valve.
- BEWARE! that really cheap presta innertubes do not have
removable valves. Don't buy them.
- Fairy Liquid, Water, dishes brush or paint brush
-
"Just Riding Along Wheel Milk"
- Scissors or a Stanley Knife blade
- Valve core remover (pliers does it for valve-removable presta)
- A big pump
- A Co2 inflator (optional)
Recipe
- Mix up some warm soapy water with the Fairy and water
- Pump up a BMX innertube
- Stretch innertube onto the rim, valve in valve-hole obviously.
You should screw on the lock-ring now as well, nice and tight.
- Cut the innertube around the outside diameter, so it deflates
and forms a flat rim-strip hanging over the edge. I'll call
this the rim-strip from now on.
- Run your finger between the rim and the rim strip to even
it out.
- Use the brush to clean the chalky stuff out of the
rim-strip. Get it pretty clean, but don't bother rinsing or drying it.
- Mount the tyre on the rim, so it's sitting inside the
rim-strip.
- Use the dishes brush to get soapy water all round the edge
of the tyre where it's sitting on the rim strip. Get it good
and wet.
- Sort of pull the tyre onto the rim edge. Do your best.
- Remove the valve core. This'll let more air in quicker - a
Good Thing.
- Pump it up. You might have to pump really fast. If you
just can't get this to work, then either the CO2
inflator or do it at the local garage
forecourt air machine. I find it's usually OK with a track pump as
long as you've removed the valve core.
- Wow! It inflated!
- Get it up to 60 PSI. The tyre is now seated on the rim. It
might make a few 'pop' or 'ping' noises. That's good, it's
seating onto the rim.
- Let the air out. Now that it's seated it'll go back up OK.
- Pour 50ml of Wheel Milk into the valve. The 100ml JRA
Wheel Milk bottle comes with a handy narrow nozzle
that's perfect for this. If your rims are very narrow, you
might have to pull the tyre bead out to avoid the Milk pouring
out the sides.
- Ready to inflate: You have 50ml or so of Wheel Milk in the
tyre. The tyre's on the rim. The rim-strip's hanging over the
sides.
- Re-insert the valve core quite firmly.
- Blow it up to about 40PSI.
- Slosh it all about. Rotate 30o and slosh it all
about. Do this for a while.
- Wipe off foamy stuff. Look for leaks. Rotate the leaks to
the bottom and wait for them to heal.
- If your tyre's really knackered you might have to patch
it. Do this with normal patches on the inside of the tyre.
Works really well in my experience, because the air pressure's
pushing the patch onto the hole instead of off the hole as
with an innertube. Another advantage!
- Once things seem stable (which is often
immediately), then cut the extra rim-strip off. To do
this, either use the scissors or CAREFULLY put the blunt edge
of the Stanley blade against the tyre sidewall, hold the
rubber with the other hand, and run the blade around the rim
edge so the extra rubber comes away neatly. Easier to do than
to explain!
- Go for a quick ride to the end of the street. Bang up some
curbs and stuff if you want, you're immune now!
- Leave it overnight. It'll likely be fine. If not, just
re-inflate and re-slosh-it-all-about.
- Ride hard on roots and rocks. Do not puncture. Amazing.
Here's a great
writeup by some American guy. Much fussier approach
to mine, but lots of good advice. I'd only recommend that
amount of fuss if the simple and (usually) effective approach
described on this page doesn't work for you.
Mountain Bike, MTB, Bicycle Maintenance, Bicycle Tools, Racing
Bikes, Cross-Country Bikes bicycles, Continental Tyres, Tires,
Maxxis, Specialized, Giant, Trek, Singlespeed, Fixed Wheel
|
|