Results 26 to 40 of 40
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11-02-2019, 01:45 PM #26
This. I set up dozens and dozens of tires every year, and this works every single time. If I'm just doing one-off tires, then I'll try seating the tire with a standard floor pump, which works about 80%. But an air compressor makes it way easier if I have to do several at a time.
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11-02-2019, 03:09 PM #27
I just did a set of Maxis Minion DHR & DHF double downs. Fucking super tight to get on the rim. I tried using my old tape (2 years old had been running with tubes for over a year because of ripped out sidewalls) forgot put sealant in the first one and it wouldn't seal. Tape looked fuct so I changed it. Decided to try without sealant, no problems sealing. Second tire sealed up with the old tape which was fortunate because I didn't have any more. I pumped the second one with a hand pump because I didn't feel like walking up to the garage, it went easy with a little squeeze of the tire to the rim at the right spot. No sealant no problem so far, will be riding this aft.
On another note, cats fucking suck. Last night I was about to do the tires but got sidetracked. I left everything in a pile in the middle of the rec room floor. This morning everything small was scattered (Tire levers, valve stems, patch kit, sealant syringe...). One valve is gone forever or until I move everything in the room. Fortunately I had a used one in my pack.
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11-04-2019, 08:10 PM #28
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11-04-2019, 10:34 PM #29
Anybody try one of these?
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11-05-2019, 12:05 AM #30
The Ryobi won’t push enough air to mount tubeless. But, I use one instead of a floor pump as they’re quick and easy to reset your pressures before a ride. Silca presto chuck lives with it. FYI they’re $25 at Home Depot
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11-05-2019, 12:44 PM #31
You definitely need something with a tank to mount tubeless. Anything that's just pumping directly doesn't flow fast enough.
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11-05-2019, 12:55 PM #32www.dpsskis.com
www.point6.com
formerly an ambassador for a few others, but the ski industry is... interesting.
Fukt: a very small amount of snow.
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11-05-2019, 01:06 PM #33
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11-05-2019, 01:23 PM #34
I bought a JoeBlow Booster last year. It seated the first couple of tires fine so I kept it. It hasn't successfully seated a single tire since in dozens of attempts. Bought that 3-gal HF pancake compressor and it's great. Just looking at the JoeBlow makes me angry. YMMV.
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11-05-2019, 01:35 PM #35Registered User
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try the rope
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
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11-05-2019, 03:51 PM #36
Congrats on recovering enough to get screen time back. What tires are you (not) mounting? I have a compressor in case, but the last two (DHF and the dreaded Wild Enduro) went on fine with just the floor pump cause I was too lazy to walk back into the garage.
Seems like Joe should at least mount the easy ones?
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11-05-2019, 04:15 PM #37
Worked before: Non-WT DHFs on can't-remember-the-model 26" DT Swiss rims, Hans Dampfs on DB Blanchard rims.
Hasn't worked: WT DHF/DHR on E13 TRS 30 rims, 24" DHFs on Sunringle Duroc 30 rims.Last edited by Dantheman; 11-05-2019 at 04:55 PM.
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11-05-2019, 04:17 PM #38
I have to do this like once or twice a year at most. I just buy a 20 or 25g CO2 cartridge and it does the trick. Almost always have one around too in my toolbox and with my riding stuff in case for some reason I have to re-seat a tire.
Assegai 29 x 2.5 recently was successful, as was a Michelin wild 29 x 2.4.
Not the most environmentally friendly solution but neither is manufacturing cheap air compressors
Also have a really small garage that is already full of shit and wouldn't want to add more equipment...but always wanted a compressor.
Does no one else do this??
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11-05-2019, 05:00 PM #39
I used to before getting an Airshot... You need to use a bigger cartridge because sometimes the small ones don’t have enough juice. Also, the cold co2 can have a detrimental affect on the sealant.
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11-05-2019, 06:07 PM #40
I was crediting sticky rubber on the beads, but wide Syntace rims might be helping my efforts, too. The last tire I put a little water on the beads, left the beads mostly in the center groove (just to see what would happen) and started pumping kinda quickly with the floor pump. It made about 6 pops and wound up seated perfectly at maybe 35 psi. It was obviously a half-decent seal before it started popping into place, which is why I think the rubber helped. The sides on this groove present a pretty shallow slope, too, though, so the pops were small. Felt like cheating. They all need to figure this out.
Why aren't we just carrying a little canister that we refill with a pump/compressor by now? Maybe a liter at 100-200 psi?
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