As was mentioned, flat tires happen. You can't avoid that reality but you can put it off or almost completely eliminate it.
If you have a fat tire bike (I am guessing you have a RadMini v4?) , then belted tires like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus - which on its own is effectively flat-free - is not an option due to the weight such a tire would come in at. Your flat avoidance strategy has to be multi-pronged in other areas as a result.
- Buy a heavier tire with a thicker casing. Downhill tires have lower 'tpi' counts due to their need to take a beating. Fancy tires are 120 tpi. Average/meh tires are 60 tpi. You want the 30 tpi count if you can get it as those tires are like tank treads. Thats the sort of tire I would have spit on back in my analog cycling days. But for an ebike commuter they are the most durable, and just as grippy as their more supple counterparts.
- Buy a thicker tube. Again if you have a fat bike, you are out of luck insofar as thornproof tubes are concerned. Best you can hope for is 1mm to 1.5mm thickness. But do look for thicker tubes. I don't have 20" fat wheels so I won't have any suggestions but get out there and look.
- Use tire sealant. Slime is the crowd favorite for tubed tires. Orange Seal and Stans come from the tubeless crowd. But Slime has been largely unimproved in decades, and Stans/OS are sub-optimal in tubed wheels - their working is hit and miss at best; their water-thin formula may seal the tire hole and leaves the tube to hiss away. Best-of-breed tire sealant now for both tubeless and tubed tires is the Sportsman Formula of FlatOut. Available on Amazon. More details on it are linked below. Its rated for 1/2" punctures which is double that of Slime and it dries into a hard nub rather than staying quasi-liquid and leaving a hole that weeps like a freshly popped zit as Slime does. Slime works but FlatOut works better.
Lastly... learn to fix your own flats. If you do the above, your sealant will actually render this step almost always unnecessary. But back when I only used Slime, I let it slow the leak to a trickle of air, where I only needed to pump the tire back up every week or so, and then I would pick a weekend morning and go in and patch all the slime-mostly-sealed-it holes. Rema Tip Top kits have been the gold standard for decades for a reason: The tube is if anything stronger than it was before the patch. The tube pictured below went to 7 patches before #8 gave it a cut on a seam that could not be repaired. At $20 a pop for a decent 26x5" tube, imagine the cost differential at one tube per hole versus about 10 cents.
As a daily rider for decades, I have some thoughts on this subject. Mostly along the lines of “no flats allowed, ever”.
talesontwowheels.com
Also... in this post-COVID environment, the local bike shop likely has a backlog of repair lasting for weeks. My LBS has devoted half its interior to a roped off area for bikes awaiting service. And they have the space because there are few bikes available for sale presently. Learn to fix things yourself or... sit and wait. A bike you ride on the mean streets of your town is going to need maintenance. Especially a Rad with its mechanical brakes etc.
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