New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Can you post a pic of the wheels? At that age they could have been replaced with anything.
Unless there is something odd about the valve hole, a standard euro-type tubeless valve should fit the rim. I get mine from kurveygirl.com.If there is something odd about it --- nevermind. :D
Use 1/8" NPT (tapered pipe thread) tap. Hole in rim is already right size. As suggested, run tap from spoke side of cast rim toward tube side. Dont go too far, you dont want hex of tank valve bottoming on rim, you want tapers to lock. Use teflon. Odds of tire jumping off rim after blow out is no higher than if you ran a tube, and of course, odds of blow out are much less if any with tubeless. Ran this set up at 147mph at Daytona. YMMV
Contact Harper's, they have the proper valve stems (no mods needed) and they are inexpensive. I had the same wheels on my Converts and ran the Bridgestone Spitfires with good results.
I don't want to appear ignorant but what is a "tank valve"?
air compressor valve, google is my friend!https://www.google.com/search?q=tank+valve&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a
:+=copcar Photo. I also did not know what a tank valve was. Thanks for the link. The only thing that is stopping the valve from blowing out are the threads. :+=copcar I know you haven't had any problems but me, I wouldn't take the chance. We are talking steel into aluminum, dissimilar metals and the galvanic action will deteriorate the threads over time. I sure the tank valve are designed for steel into steel not steel into aluminum under pressure. :BEER:Matt
then I would go with this,
http://www.harpermoto.com/tubeless-valve-stem.htmlBearing in mind the concave shape of the internal surface of the Guzzi wheel, does the rubber seal sit nicely in place without the nuts being done up excessively tight?
Looked at the valve from Harpers and I can source a similar one in the UK.Take it this is the one mentioned: http://www.harpermoto.com/tubeless-valve-stem.htmlBearing in mind the concave shape of the internal surface of the Guzzi wheel, does the rubber seal sit nicely in place without the nuts being done up excessively tight?
Yes, but at speed, centrifugal force is keeping the tank valve in.... 8^)) (while true, just kidding as a safety net)Also, most of the tank valves I have seen are chrome plated brass. So you are talking galvanic action between a cupric alloy and aluminum, not steel. Plus, once oxidized, aluminum will form an oxide that does not continue to erode. I sincerely doubt this is as bad as a steel/copper union in your house plumbing which will corode until you have a leak. There you have a medium which is continually scouring the junction and removing any protective oxide coating... Here, the junction is protected...
I agree. And galvanic action with chrome/brass and Al will be very slow.And, if the threads do give up you can always get one of the rubber washer types :) pely
I am going to say this as politely as I can but I just don't think you know what you are talking about. Sorry. The stem is going to blow out do to the sudden increase in pressure when you hit a bump in the road a speed. Tire pressure is going to decrease very quickly and you are going to be in for a ride. With luck the tire bead will remain seated. As stated in a previous post this is a very clean conversion, but now that I know what a tank valve is, I wouldn't trust it. There is a reason this system is not used through out the industry.:BEER:Matt