Are stick on patches any good. Could not find glue on or vulcanize type in my town.
These are the only ones that I use now, as they are the only ones that actually sometimes work. I'm referring to the smallest sized ones, maybe not the size referenced. I remember when it was really easy to patch tubes and the never worry about the patch coming off. I rememebr having as many as 13 patches on a single tube too.I've used Rema kits since the 1980s, and still do. I find they still work with modern tubes, even latex tubes, even at 100+ PSI.
https://www.amazon.com/REMA-Tour-Patch-Kit-Large/dp/B0016HSA4O
I tried those about 27 years ago, soon after they came out. They seemed to work initially, but consistently would start leaking 1-3 days later. A friend had the same experience. In other words, they were ok to you get you home, but worthless as a permanent repair.Yep. The Park glueless patches are great. ...
I wouldn't trust it. If you can't cement it, replace the tube. Myself, I would repair it and store it in your bike bag in case you are faced with a road side repair.Are stick on patches any good. Could not find glue on or vulcanize type in my town.
I don't run tubes so I don't know if they work or not. I do know they get people back to their car. Been tubeless since 2011.I tried those about 27 years ago, soon after they came out. They seemed to work initially, but consistently would start leaking 1-3 days later. A friend had the same experience. In other words, they were ok to you get you home, but worthless as a permanent repair.
Are they any better now? I bought some Slime brand glueless patches a couple of years ago, but haven't tried one yet.
Conventional glue-on patches (Rema, for example) are reliable long-term, if carefully installed. However, ones that aren't too big for narrow tires are annoyingly hard to find.
TMI.Tubeless for a year. Seems like the real thing. A few kinks, but easily overcome.
For mountain bikes, I agree 100%. With tubeless you can run much lower pressures, for better traction. It's impossible to do this with tubes because pressures low enough would give pinch flats every time you hit a bump. Tubeless for MTB is a huge benefit.Tubeless for a year. Seems like the real thing. A few kinks, but easily overcome.
Twice a year? Coming up on one year, all is well. I used Stan's. Even if I have to do it this summer, then fine as you say, worth it.The drawback to tubeless is the sealant gradually dries up so you've got to remove tire and old sealant and re-do it all at least once or twice per year. I get flats less often than that even with tubes, so tubeless would actually have me doing this tire swap work MORE often, not less. For mountain bikes, it's worth it because it makes such a big improvement.
On my MTB, the fluid inside the tire starts to dry up and lose its effectiveness after 6-12 months. This isn't easily apparent through visual inspection, but if you wait too long you'll find out when you get a puncture that doesn't seal.Twice a year? Coming up on one year, all is well. I used Stan's. Even if I have to do it this summer, then fine as you say, worth it.