livpoksoc
Guru
- Location
- Basingstoke
Quick update here - I finally took the tyre off yesterday, thoroughly cleaned it down and the same with the rim. I have removed the worms from the two large holes, cleaned out any debris wiped with alcohol. Then (under guidance from the lbs) put standard inner tube patches on the inside of the tyre with the solution too. The rest is my own attempt - I used a clamp on each patch to help it set, and then ran a bead of solution around the edge of one patch and superglue the other as a bit of an A/B test. I then left it overnight to set.
This morning, I reseated the tyre and loaded up with sealant, and pumped it up (compressor first) keeping everything crossed. I then began manual pumping and got to 60psi before tell tale hissing began - but thankfully not from the patched holes, only from the smaller hole. I gave the wheel a few spins and hung it with this hole facing the floor to encourage the sealant into it.
I've just gone back in and repumped it up, the same small hole hissed again but this time it seemed to stop after a minute, and sealant appears to have plugged the hole as it is setting.
Frustratingly one of the larger holes is bubbling (but not hissing) which does mean it's compromised, but going to try the same hangy upside downy trick again to see if this helps reinforce it enough to hold the air sufficiently enough to allow me to ride it and hopefully get some extra miles off it.
From an A/B perspective, I think this one was the superglue beaded patch, and if it continues to lose pressure I'll replicate the one that's holding.
This morning, I reseated the tyre and loaded up with sealant, and pumped it up (compressor first) keeping everything crossed. I then began manual pumping and got to 60psi before tell tale hissing began - but thankfully not from the patched holes, only from the smaller hole. I gave the wheel a few spins and hung it with this hole facing the floor to encourage the sealant into it.
I've just gone back in and repumped it up, the same small hole hissed again but this time it seemed to stop after a minute, and sealant appears to have plugged the hole as it is setting.
Frustratingly one of the larger holes is bubbling (but not hissing) which does mean it's compromised, but going to try the same hangy upside downy trick again to see if this helps reinforce it enough to hold the air sufficiently enough to allow me to ride it and hopefully get some extra miles off it.
From an A/B perspective, I think this one was the superglue beaded patch, and if it continues to lose pressure I'll replicate the one that's holding.