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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Quote Originally Posted by Sindyeli View Post
    Have you had to top off the tube with your pump or the opposite, being careful not to blow your tube up with too much air? And do you carry a gauge or just go by feel?
    One of my methods for putting on a new tube is to partially inflate the tube, seat the tire on the tube and deflate the tube. I re-inflate the tube and check that the tire is equally seated on the rim and then inflate the tube all the way if it is. This method had helped me decrease the liklihood of a pinch flat. If you have a CO2 cartridge, you have one shot to inflate it to the max psi. That's why I think it's a good idea to have both a CO2 inflator and a hand pump.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    1,414
    Quote Originally Posted by sundial View Post
    One of my methods for putting on a new tube is to partially inflate the tube, seat the tire on the tube and deflate the tube. I re-inflate the tube and check that the tire is equally seated on the rim and then inflate the tube all the way if it is. This method had helped me decrease the liklihood of a pinch flat. If you have a CO2 cartridge, you have one shot to inflate it to the max psi. That's why I think it's a good idea to have both a CO2 inflator and a hand pump.
    You can do a partial inflate with most C02 pumps (both my big Ultraflate and teeny Silca threaded pump will allow it). If you truly just inflate to a few PSI, there's no need to deflate the tube to seat the tire, if you are careful. I usually will pre-inflate a little bit. Then after I've seated the tire, but before inflating all the way, I will go around the entire tire, checking both sides, to make sure there are no areas where the tube is up under the bead (but if you pre-inflate a little, this doesn't happen as often anyway).

    I'm still able to inflate to full pressure using just one cartridge...

    That said, I usually carry lots of extra cartridges. They don't take up much room. I always carry one or two tubes (depending on ride length), glueless patches (which I have used during rides before), 3-4 cartridges, and CO2 pump. I don't have a frame pump and don't really see a need for one, as long as you carry more than 1-2 cartridges...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Toltec, Arkansaw
    Posts
    512
    For just pedaling around town, I carry a micro-inflator, three CO2 cartridges, two tire levers, a spare (usually new) tube in a plastic baggie, a patch kit, and a Park MTB-3 multi-tool. For the long training or touring rides, I add a frame pump in one of the jersey pockets. So far, so good, the only time I've had a long walk in the past three or four years was when the LBS took my wedge pack off the seatpost for a service job, forgot to put it back on, and I forgot to check it until I had a flat on the next ride way out at the turnaround point ;-)

 

 

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