It looks like some form of metal fatigue crack propagating from spoke to spoke, as Mr Flecc says it will only get worse, I would also check your front wheel too (although it is more lightly loaded) in case there is a batch fault with the rims and that is on its way out as well. If under guarantee, contact your supplier asap. Are they magnesium alloy rims, 'cos if so it could also be the effect of salt water corrosion weakening the metal.View attachment 10793 Hi.Here is a pic of my rear rim on my Freego Eagle and I've never come across it before?? what the hell happened to it ?? no wonder I kept getting punctures !! My question is what do I do now!! tape it up and try again? new wheel? or take it to a shop for a new rim & spokes !!!.
Regards Steve
Cables ties was your problem. You should have gone with duck tapeYes, that's beyond bodging.
We once tried to keep a blown tyre on a rim using cable ties.
The rim split along the braking surface ... braking surfaces wear out over time. This one got too thin and gave way before GJ realised the sitatution. What GJ then did was deflate the tyre, taped it up and then pumped the tyre back up and I think road about 700 km [that might be from another emergency so not 100% sure of the distance but know it as a fair distance for sure] of more dirt roads to the next town where he got a rim shipped in IIRC.That's interesting. It looks like another Marathon Plus that's popping off. That's four I've heard of, and I've never heard of it with any other tyre!
What caused it? Was there rim damage or did it just pop off?
It looks like towing a trailer was involved as well. Like the rest of the gang, I have rarely seen this happen. When I did come across it, it was usually on a decent quality aluminum rim. This could very well be a "one of" caused by a manufacturing fault or as a result of a hard impact and spread. The latter being more likely.
Funny you should say this. I had a customer come in just the other day with a problem as in the picture. It was caused by rim failure due to the brake pads wearing down the sides of the rim. And yes it had a marathon on it. Like you, this was not the first time I saw similar factors. Yet in every case it happened on a bike used daily, in every kind of weather, as a commuter bike. The rim failure was bound to happen as it does on bikes used this way.That's interesting. It looks like another Marathon Plus that's popping off. That's four I've heard of, and I've never heard of it with any other tyre!
What caused it? Was there rim damage or did it just pop off?
Funny you should say this. I had a customer come in just the other day with a problem as in the picture. It was caused by rim failure due to the brake pads wearing down the sides of the rim. And yes it had a marathon on it. Like you, this was not the first time I saw similar factors. Yet in every case it happened on a bike used daily, in every kind of weather, as a commuter bike. The rim failure was bound to happen as it does on bikes used this way.
The only factor contributed by the tyre was the pressure involved. Most original eguipment tyres carry a max rating of 65 to 70 p.s.i. Marathon Plus tyres are rated for 85 p.s.i. Some Schwalbe commuter tyes are rated for 110 p.s.i. This means lower rolling resistance and improved puncture resistance, both important to daily commuter. Combine that with those that run their Marathon Plus tyres at 90 to 100 p.s.i. ( like I do) and the likelyhood of rim failure increases if you do not monitor the condition of your rim, (They have wear lines in most cases.)
This is not unusual and is part of the wear and tear factors that come into play when putting a lot of miles on a bike. Just like a car, parts wear out. Rim replacement will be necessary eventually regardless of the tyre and pressure used.
Hi Steve,Hi the rim wearing couldn't have been the problem with mine as it has disc brakes and everyone I show this pic to are all amazed and have never seen anything like it??? was I lucky not to have had a bad accident????????.
Regards Steve.
Yes, obviously not rim wear with that disc brake in your photo. The only thing I can think of the cause this parting company like that is the possibility of a sudden shock impact on a tyre at quite high pressure.
For example, arriving quite fast at a speed calming ramp and maybe braking a bit at the same time, the downthrust and the large contact length as the ramp rises could produce a very sharp pressure rise, giving a shock expansion to the tyre. The rim still shouldn't give way, but it might have had a weakness to begin with.
.