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Good read here on this subject! Im replacing my tires over the winter, and Ive been on the fence about doing this. I have a 02 California stone, and I plan to do some longer rides with it. I dont have a center stand, so flats on the road with tube tires could be a major issue. I would never have a shop do it for me.. ill be doing it myself. I have used the 5200 sealant before in marine applications, and know what it can do, so Im really thinking that is the way Im going myself, but im still open to others ideas. Maybe this wicking thread locker works..But I dont know.. seems the slightest mess up in prep would cause a failure. Maybe its just I cant get past so little amount of product being able to seal.. Personally I would worry about it all the time but thats just how im wired. But really... I think all of these ways will be fully able to work, and seal.. I think it just comes down to what YOU feel comfortable with
I too would be concerned about the absence of safety beads on rims designed for tubed tires. Several years ago, I was messing around with a set of Lester mags on an old BMW. The Lesters were designed for tubed tires, and don’t have retention beads. I was trying to find out if I could run the wheels without tubes. I discovered that there’s a lot of strong opinions out there, and no consensus.
Well good news on my front.. It seems like the rims on my 02 California has the safety bead... Though like some, I cant see rapid deflation with a tube, or a deflating tubeless slipping a bead are any different..
Well said WirespokesI remember some British bikes had a security bolt, I think it jambes a wedge between the side-walls, I never had a bike with them fitted.None of the bikes I had would pull the skin off a rice pudding.
It can be easily demonstrated, let the air out of a tubeless wheel and a tube type wheel and go for a low speed ride on each. See which tire stays on the rim.
We have no argument with that. None at all. We all agree the safetybead is a very good thing and superior to a non-safetybead rim. The only downside of the safety bead being difficulty getting the bead to seat. The question being debated is whether it's safe to run a tire without a tube on a non-safetybead rim.
It's much less safe, it's safe to say.
Nice link, Roy! It's a long read, though. But very good. You guys, Ed and Vita, should read it and then get back to us.Ed - no, tubeless isn't safer because of safety beads or some placebo effect. They're safer because the tire tends to seal up the entry point, and since that's the only place for air to escape, it leaves very slowly if at all. With a tube, the bladder POPS or quickly deflates and the air exits the spoke holes or valve stem hole. it's a much more rapid deflate. As already mentioned, the issue isn't whether safety beads are good or not. They definitely are. No argument there what-so-ever. The argument is whether to run a tube type rim tubeless. In the article Roy posted, the only possible negative point against running tubeless was with the front rim. It's possible under hard cornering to break the bead loose if running tubeless without a safety bead. Not sure if that's ever happened, but the pros are concerned that's a possibility. I've run BMW snowflake rims, front and back, tubeless without anything like that every happening. Even though I've got minimal chicken strips I wouldn't call my cornering style aggressive. You'd have to really man-handle the thing to break the bead loose in a turn. You're telling us that because the pros say not to, that, for some reason or other (that you're trying to guess) it's not safe. As another example, consider this: remember back in the 70s or 80s when european halogen headlights were so much better than our ancient sealed beams, but the only way to get them was from the display at the auto parts store that said "for off road use only!"? They were illegal because they weren't sealed up per law. How stupid was that? And following through - I wonder how many guys wondered what was wrong with halogen lights because they were illegal? It's true you'll probably have to install your own tires if going this route, in which case there's no argument if that's not your thing. You wouldn't be converting anyway. But just in case, or you want to debate this farther, do read that article! It'll give you a lot more data to think with. Here, I'll link it again:https://bestrestproducts.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Tube-Tires-VS-Tubeless-Tires.pdf