This morning I had my first puncture with my Marathons (not M+) on the Pro C.
The weather was lovely, (25mph headwind and raining) so I donned my overtrousers, and my overshoes, jacket, gloves, neck buff/face mask, helmet with rain cover, flicked the Pro C into High mode and felt ready for anything.
Halfway to work I felt the 'wobbly-jelly' back tyre feel and knew what it meant. The time was 7:08am.
So I altered the Xbar bits and flipped the bike over. rather than repair the puncture I chose to swap the tube, disconnecting the brake, gear cable, and removing the wheel, removing the swapping one NuTrax 'self-sealing' (ha, yeah right!) inner for another (and checking that there was nothing inside the tyre).
Unfortunatly when putting it back together, the combination of lubricant and rain water on the Shimano Nexus sprung gears combined to make it take me approx 15 mins just to get the gears reconnected. Add that to the re-inflation using a mini-pump to 70psi whilst wrapped up like Scott of the Antartic meant I was rather warmed by the whole experience.
At 7:42am I got back on my bike and continued my ride into the wind and rain for the remaining 5 miles of my commute.
Now at 1:30pm I still feel physically shattered by the ordeal.
What I want to know is if any others have any tips to repairing punctures faster that I could use, any ideas welcome.
John
The weather was lovely, (25mph headwind and raining) so I donned my overtrousers, and my overshoes, jacket, gloves, neck buff/face mask, helmet with rain cover, flicked the Pro C into High mode and felt ready for anything.
Halfway to work I felt the 'wobbly-jelly' back tyre feel and knew what it meant. The time was 7:08am.
So I altered the Xbar bits and flipped the bike over. rather than repair the puncture I chose to swap the tube, disconnecting the brake, gear cable, and removing the wheel, removing the swapping one NuTrax 'self-sealing' (ha, yeah right!) inner for another (and checking that there was nothing inside the tyre).
Unfortunatly when putting it back together, the combination of lubricant and rain water on the Shimano Nexus sprung gears combined to make it take me approx 15 mins just to get the gears reconnected. Add that to the re-inflation using a mini-pump to 70psi whilst wrapped up like Scott of the Antartic meant I was rather warmed by the whole experience.
At 7:42am I got back on my bike and continued my ride into the wind and rain for the remaining 5 miles of my commute.
Now at 1:30pm I still feel physically shattered by the ordeal.
What I want to know is if any others have any tips to repairing punctures faster that I could use, any ideas welcome.
John