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Friday July 30 , 2010
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Displaying items by tag: Tubes

When you go for a cycle there are a few essential items that you need to have with you. So here is the mountainbiking.ie essential guide to getting yourself from door to door without having to pull a trailer behind you. If you cycle a bike you will definitely get a puncture at some stage. Regularly, people head out with no pumps, no patches, no spare tube, no tyre levers. So they get a puncture and have to flag someone down for assistance. You are more likely to get a puncture in the wet. The water on the tyre's causes grit to cling to the tyre because of surface tension. There are a few things you can do to make getting a puncture less hassle.

Published in Beginners

When I was a child, a puncture meant leaving the bike in the shed until the following summer when your dad got around to buying a puncture repair kit and fixing it. The procedure included basins of water, chalk, sandpaper, patches, glue and talc. It usually took up an entire Saturday morning. Eventually I learned to fix punctures myself, and even bought my patches on a roll. I could skillfully rough up the tube using a kerb instead of sandpaper, and I didn't dispose of tubes until they resembled a patchwork quilt. I had patches on patches before the tube was eventually binned.

Published in Beginners