mschwett
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
I think this may be a function of the tire more than it is the tubeless platform. If the tires fit tightly to the rims, you can do entirely without sealant, crazily enough. The tires will go flat in a couple days like that, but still you can go ride in a sealant-free tire.
Maxxis tires in particular on DT Swiss rims I have found fit like gloves on three separate bikes, with no sealant needed as described above. With sealant inside - the same magical Flatout I was going on about earlier - the tubeless tires stay inflated and rideable for months. Its a slow decline, but very slow. This is also true for my fat bikes with Vee tires (Snowshoe XL and Snow Avalanche) shod on Nextie carbon fiber rims. Nextie seems to have a rep for tight fitment so maybe the star of that show is the rims.
for sure - and some tires are known to be more porous than others. when my tires are new and freshly filled with 2oz of sealant, they lose maybe 1psi a week. after three months (at which point the rear is getting to 60% worn) it’s more like 2psi a day! if i don’t refill them, and remove the tire, there’s hardly any sealant left, so it’s mostly the tire and tire to rim seal doing the work.
i would not be surprised if eventually tires and rims were tweaked a bit further than the current standard to simply eliminate the tubes and sealant for regular duty, with the sealant only functioning to seal punctures.