SJPT Interesting thanks for that., Just that at my age, I don't want to struggle with punctures while out on a ride to be honest. I expect the type of tyres you get on cheaper Chinese bikes are the worse, maybe someone will correct me? I'll just have to watch a few more "How to repair a puncture" videos I guess and be prepared.I've not tried tubeless; where practicable that probably is the way to go.
I've tried slime, complete pain. It didn't stop a puncture, and a mess over the inner tube (practically unrepairable) and the inside of the outer. Other people have reported good success with it; my experience was some years ago, so maybe they have better slime these days?
Marathon Plus have been brilliant for me over many years; but the ride is not the smoothest and very poor sideways grip, eg in thin mud.
The OP is hoping to cycle canal paths. IMHO Marathon Plus are great for on-road use, but too slippy for the varied terrain you often find on canal paths. I'd have thought one of the other Schwalbe tyres - a wider, trekking oriented tyre might be better for both comfort and grip on a mix of smooth paved, rough paved, loose stone, ash, mud, grass... Whatever the style/purpose of tyre, Schwalbe often offer a choice of added puncture protection (reflected in the cost of the tyre), as some other tyre makers do too (Kenda etc).I don't want to struggle with punctures while out on a ride to be honest. I expect the type of tyres you get on cheaper Chinese bikes are the worse, maybe someone will correct me?
Schwalbe do versions of the Marathon Plus with different treads like this MTB one that Chain Reaction Cycles are selling:The OP is hoping to cycle canal paths. IMHO Marathon Plus are great for on-road use, but too slippy for the varied terrain you often find on canal paths.
Any stiffer tyre will have somewhat less grip on undulating surfaces than one with a softer compound, but I'd guess that knobbly tread on the MTB version would make up for it. There's an intermediate one as well if the canal paths aren't too rough.That's my bad. I didn't realise Schwalbe did so many variants of tyre wearing the same "Marathon Plus" name. Those Marathon Plus MTBs are listed in Schwalbes city/tour section (i.e. not in their cross, gravel or MTB section). Would they be preferable to some of their other softer/more compliant compound offerings for towpath use?
I've got Marathon Plus on two of my e-bikes, and Marathon Greenguard on my e-folder: The Green is definitely a more comfortable/compliant/forgiving tyre with less "puncture band" (3mm instead of 5mm). It doesn't seem to want to slip as much in the wet although I don't know if that's because it has a more open tread or is a softer compound (no punctures yet).
I think the higher the pressure of the inner tube or tubeless tyre the less likely it will seal so probably makes more sense for fat bikes that run tyres at low pressure than road bikes with very high pressure tyres it will of course depend on the size of the puncture too.I've not tried tubeless; where practicable that probably is the way to go.
I've tried slime, complete pain. It didn't stop a puncture, and a mess over the inner tube (practically unrepairable) and the inside of the outer. Other people have reported good success with it; my experience was some years ago, so maybe they have better slime these days?
Marathon Plus have been brilliant for me over many years; but the ride is not the smoothest and very poor sideways grip, eg in thin mud.
As suggested in this post there are a number of ways to mitigate the chances of getting a flat (some better than others), but I would highly recommend that you do as you yourself suggest, and that is to get back to basics and learn how to mend a puncture the 'old fashioned' way, ie. taking the tyre off,* looking for the item that cuased the puncture, (or at least to ensure it's still not in the tyre), replace with a new tube ('cos you are carrying at least one spare tube aren't you?) and fixing the punctured tube with proper glue and patches........... "How to repair a puncture" videos I guess and be prepared.