procreator
Active Member
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- USA
I've used Slime before on my garden tractor. Can you provide some guidance on using it in bike tires? Thanks!
I'm on the east coast, where we don't have goat heads. But I've conversed with western bicyclists enough in on-line forums to know that the one and only true way to deal with the goat head problem is the Tubeless tire set up.So of course I got my first flat tire, I was expecting one sooner than later because we have a lot of goat heads and I have been doing single track right through them. What is the best tire armor? I have never been a big fan of slime but I have used it on my lawnmowers with success. What do you guys use?
Although the goat heads are a real pain to deal with they leave a really small puncture and unless you have several at once it creates a slow leak. I only had one small puncture this time but I have had my tire full of goat heads before with multiple punctures. It can generally be taken care of with slime or something equal. I have this problem with my yard equipment and after slimming everything my tires all stay up. I will see how this FlatOut works out and may end up going to the Tannus Armour if I still have issues.I'm on the east coast, where we don't have goat heads. But I've conversed with western bicyclists enough in on-line forums to know that the one and only true way to deal with the goat head problem is the Tubeless tire set up.
I run tannus armour in my tubed fatbike tires and have had enough thorns penetrate them to tell you that they will not do the job against a goathead thorn. Neither will slime.
When you do eventually bite the bullet and go tubeless, arm yourself with a good tire pump as well as a good plugging system such as the ones offered by DynaPlug. Expensive, yes, but they work. And any tubeless rider will still have to carry a tube with them in case of a catastrophic tire blow out that can't be fixed via a tire plug system.
I've been riding a fatbike exclusively since 2016; first a Fatboy and now a Haibike Full FatSix. I have a Master's Degree in Flat Tires, suffered, er, earned at the University of Hard Knocks. By a rough estimate, over 25,000 miles of fat bike riding, on pavement, trail, sand trail, snow. I've done it all. Just tubes. Tubes with Mr Tuffy liners. Tubeless. Tannus Armour and finally, in an act of temporary insanity, a rear tire with a tube, followed by the Tannus Armour and capped off with the Mr Tuffy liner. I've had one particular stretch of 3 consecutive days with a flattened tire. Multiple days of back to back flats. So with that, I think I can safely tell you that the tubeless setup is the one and only method that is going to seal your tire and allow you to roll onto your next goathead. And the next. And the next after that. And I offer that advice by running today with just tubes and tannus armours.Although the goat heads are a real pain to deal with they leave a really small puncture and unless you have several at once it creates a slow leak. I only had one small puncture this time but I have had my tire full of goat heads before with multiple punctures. It can generally be taken care of with slime or something equal. I have this problem with my yard equipment and after slimming everything my tires all stay up. I will see how this FlatOut works out and may end up going to the Tannus Armour if I still have issues.
Just curious... Can someone posts a picture of these goatheads? I don't spend too much time on trails (yet).
Thanks
They hurt so bad to step on bare footed, almost worse than it should.Thanks for sharing these pics. They look nasty. If I had to choose, I'd rather hit them with a bike tire than bare feet.
There are many different varieties, these are the ones they got their name from
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the ones common around me look more like this
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