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Thread: Anyone have anything they'd like to rant about?

  1. #4201
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
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    Down In A Hole, Up in the Sky
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    We call my wife “The Great Locatress”. It’s her super-power.
    Forum Cross Pollinator, gratuitously strident

  2. #4202
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
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    Way Out, CO
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dee Hubbs View Post
    Her "Oh boy, what part am I looking for on the floor?"
    Helluva partner you've got there, DH. Made me smile, as mine has the same 'not understanding but still understanding' patience with me.

  3. #4203
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
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    The better LA
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    Quote Originally Posted by evdog View Post
    Without fail, every time I swap tires or add sealant I somehow end up with a huge fucking mess. Am I the only one?

    It's never the same thing either. Tonight the tire seated perfectly with my floor pump and I was on track for the cleanest tire swap ever. Add first syringe of 2oz sealant, perfect. Go to add another 2oz and the hose clogs as I'm pressing the plunger and bursts off the syringe. Sealant everywhere.

    Attachment 430550
    Been there.
    The next day I ordered this:

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    https://www.parktool.com/en-us/produ...injector-tsi-1
    Quote Originally Posted by Jer View Post
    After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ian Malcolm View Post
    I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
    But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.

  4. #4204
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    Quote Originally Posted by Roxtar View Post
    Been there.
    The next day I ordered this:

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    https://www.parktool.com/en-us/produ...injector-tsi-1
    Welcome to 15 posts ago. [emoji6]

    FWIW, the Amazon ones are under $10 and they have a valve.

  5. #4205
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
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    Shadynasty's Jazz Club
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    10,323
    Quote Originally Posted by rideit View Post
    We call my wife “The Great Locatress”. It’s her super-power.

    Lucky man. I'm the great locatress in my house. Yesterday, annoyed, my wife asked where I put the can of dog food she left on the island cause I had just cleared it of crap (again). We went back and forth with me saying if I moved it, I put it where it goes, and her telling me she's looked everywhere and I had to be the one that "lost" it. Finally, I went to the cupboard where we put dog food and there it was, front and center.
    Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.

  6. #4206
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
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    The better LA
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    Quote Originally Posted by Touring_Sedan View Post
    Welcome to 15 posts ago. [emoji6]

    FWIW, the Amazon ones are under $10 and they have a valve.
    And they are the same cheap syringes that pull apart at the shaft/seal as soon as you put any pressure on the "pull".
    But hey, they do have a valve
    Quote Originally Posted by Jer View Post
    After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ian Malcolm View Post
    I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
    But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.

  7. #4207
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    Quote Originally Posted by Roxtar View Post
    And they are the same cheap syringes that pull apart at the shaft/seal as soon as you put any pressure on the "pull".
    But hey, they do have a valve
    Um, no. They're not, but you keep feeding that big blue monster.

  8. #4208
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
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    Treading Water
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    7,192
    Quote Originally Posted by Touring_Sedan View Post
    Welcome to 15 posts ago. [emoji6]

    FWIW, the Amazon ones are under $10 and they have a valve.
    I’m here to report that the Park syringe is well worth the extra price.
    Smoother in both directions.
    Easier to clean.
    More volume.
    You don’t have to buy it, but if you do you’re likely to agree.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    However many are in a shit ton.

  9. #4209
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
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    SLC
    Posts
    775
    Costco brand microfiber towels have gotten smaller over the years! Sneaky bastards. I stumbled across an old one from about 6 years ago. Newer one in front.

    Click image for larger version. 

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  10. #4210
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
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    SLC burbs
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    Quote Originally Posted by rideit View Post
    We call my wife “The Great Locatress”. It’s her super-power.
    Ms Boissal finally took a look in the area I "misplaced" the linkage washer. Well, she wasn't actually looking, just passing through. She immediately spotted the washer, in a spot I scoured at least 5 times, by day and by headlamp, standing then on all fours.
    She just texted me a picture of the washer with the "is this what you were looking for the past 3 days?"

    This will make up for all the times she randomly decides to rearrange an entire room and move everything to a new logical location (to her), ensuring I need to open every drawer and cabinet for at least a week to figure out where my stuff has gone.
    "Your wife being mad is temporary, but pow turns do not get unmade" - mallwalker the wise

  11. #4211
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
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    Shadynasty's Jazz Club
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    Years ago, my daughter was sitting on her dresser looking in the mirror examining the strand of dental floss tied to her first loose tooth. The other end of the floss had a loop that I was going to attach to a door knob to do the old door slam trick. She decided she wasn't into it and jumped down, miraculously hooking a toe on that loop, yanking the tooth and sending it flying. We spent the better part of a day scouring for it, even going as far as to pull most of the furniture out of the room. As a final effort, I put a fresh bag in the vacuum cleaner and vacuumed the hell out of the carpet. We cut the bag open and sitting on top of the dust and crud was that asshole tooth.
    Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.

  12. #4212
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
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    The better LA
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    Quote Originally Posted by Touring_Sedan View Post
    Um, no. They're not,
    Um yeah, they kinda are. The cheap plastic syringes that sell by themselves for about 5/$10. They have a plastic plunger that slips into the rubber seal. After a while, you pull on the plunger, it pulls out of the seal (probably when that stupid valve gets clogged up).

    Quote Originally Posted by Touring_Sedan View Post
    but you keep feeding that big blue monster.
    And who are you feeding? Can you even pronounce the name of the company? (Apparently Pat Sajak isn't the only one who charges for vowels).
    I'm happy to feed Park Tool. They're an American company in the bike industry that makes tools that last forever at the lower end of professional tool pricing.
    Some things are disposable. I don't think tools belong in that category.
    The Park injector cost $25 and I guarantee it will still be working perfectly after you're on the 3rd replacement of that amazon special.
    But hey, I'm sure Bezo will send you a nice thank you card from his mega-yacht.
    Quote Originally Posted by Jer View Post
    After the first three seconds, Corbet's is really pretty average.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ian Malcolm View Post
    I mean, it's not your fault. They say talent skips a generation.
    But hey, I'm sure your kids will be sharp as tacks.

  13. #4213
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    Granite, UT
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    2,663
    Quote Originally Posted by Roxtar View Post
    Um yeah, they kinda are. The cheap plastic syringes that sell by themselves for about 5/$10. They have a plastic plunger that slips into the rubber seal. After a while, you pull on the plunger, it pulls out of the seal (probably when that stupid valve gets clogged up).

    And who are you feeding? Can you even pronounce the name of the company? (Apparently Pat Sajak isn't the only one who charges for vowels).
    I'm happy to feed Park Tool. They're an American company in the bike industry that makes tools that last forever at the lower end of professional tool pricing.
    Some things are disposable. I don't think tools belong in that category.
    The Park injector cost $25 and I guarantee it will still be working perfectly after you're on the 3rd replacement of that amazon special.
    But hey, I'm sure Bezo will send you a nice thank you card from his mega-yacht.
    Ok, Boomer.

    I'm sure you had your LBS order that overpriced POS for you. I'm sure you brought them a 6er of IPA too. Right.

  14. #4214
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
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    Conformist, Complacent State
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    1,056
    I always found that pressurizing and squirting syringe clogs up. You are essentially asking the sealant to coagulate and clog as it was designed to do. I just use a larger syringe as a funnel and gravity feed it so the sperm don't get all log jam
    So the world is filled with tubular entities. Food goes in one end and shit comes out the other. Sperm goes in and babies come out.

  15. #4215
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    May 2012
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    People's Republic of OB
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    I've used the small stan's bottle and a couple different syringes including the Stans one that screws on to the valve stem. I've had much better luck with that since it's one less spot that can easily fail. Doesn't seem to matter what I use though, a mess always ensues. If it isn't a hose popping off or me accidentally knocking over the sealant bottle, then I'll inevitably need to take the sealant filled tire off and sealant will drip all over then.

  16. #4216
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    May 2012
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    Oh, and.....

    Second dropper lever that's bent on me in the last couple months.

    Click image for larger version. 

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  17. #4217
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    Jan 2009
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    SLC burbs
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    Stan's used to come with the syringe a long time ago, I've never had an issue with it. It screws onto the valve pretty well once the core is removed even though I've mashed the plastic threads into oblivion by now. I use that option if I'm refilling sealant, if I'm installing a tire I just remove the little screw adapter thing and just syringe directly into the wheel. I rinse the syringe and tube with water and it's good to go the next time. Only downside of that syringe is that it maxes at 2 oz of fluid and I usually put a bit more in my tires.

    I've had syringes lose the rubber head of their piston a few times, funny thing is that it usually happens with seemingly higher quality disposable syringes I extract from the lab. They do not like dealing with any type of oil, be it mineral oil or fork oil. I think it makes the rubber swell up and stick. Interestingly enough they tolerate DOT fluid quite well but you're pretty much guaranteed a squirter if they're used more than once with oil.

    Quote Originally Posted by evdog View Post
    Oh, and.....

    Second dropper lever that's bent on me in the last couple months.
    I just moved a WolfTooth lever between bikes and the second it came off the bars it was clear it had taken a massive beating. I was confused then remembered I mashed it into a rock this spring and broke a part (plastic bushing it rotates on) but had a spare on me. I fixed it trailside, it actuated fine, I never thought about it again. The lever must have bent 30 degrees and rotated the same amount so I didn't notice until I took a close look. Somehow it still works fine and I'm not going to snap it while trying to straighten it out...
    The lesson to me is that you should have everything on the bars barely tight enough to stay in place under normal use. That way it can happily rotate out of the way instead of breaking when you inevitably dump the bike. It took me a while and some good $$ to learn that!
    "Your wife being mad is temporary, but pow turns do not get unmade" - mallwalker the wise

  18. #4218
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    cow hampshire
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    9,420
    I don't seem to have stans issues and I'm not sure why I don't?

    The only time I make a mess is trying to transfer used stans from a dead tire to the new one. I saw a vid of a guy who uses a...well I already forgot wtf!...but essentially a Dixie cup to scoop the old out and dump into the new tire.

    For new I either do what others have said, or I seal the whole tire and use the little refill bottle that fits tight over the valve, remove core and just squirt it in.

  19. #4219
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
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    LV-426
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    I've been using the syringe that comes with Truckerco sealant -- works fine, no clogs. I rinse it out with a hose after each use and let it dry before putting it away.
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07VYVYYPB...ckerco+sealant
    Quote Originally Posted by powder11 View Post
    if you have to resort to taking advice from the nitwits on this forum, then you're doomed.

  20. #4220
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    May 2012
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    People's Republic of OB
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boissal View Post
    I just moved a WolfTooth lever between bikes and the second it came off the bars it was clear it had taken a massive beating. I was confused then remembered I mashed it into a rock this spring and broke a part (plastic bushing it rotates on) but had a spare on me. I fixed it trailside, it actuated fine, I never thought about it again. The lever must have bent 30 degrees and rotated the same amount so I didn't notice until I took a close look. Somehow it still works fine and I'm not going to snap it while trying to straighten it out...
    The lesson to me is that you should have everything on the bars barely tight enough to stay in place under normal use. That way it can happily rotate out of the way instead of breaking when you inevitably dump the bike. It took me a while and some good $$ to learn that!
    Yup, always keep bar controls just tight enough. In this case it got hit at just such an angle it bent rather than rotate. I was actually impressed with how stout it was, the lever was still working fine aside from cable starting to fray. But wanted to replace it to not tempt fate. I was able to bend it back almost straight so I'll keep it as a spare.

    The previous lever had a small plastic edge break where it mounts to the SRAM bar clamp, not even sure how that happened but wasn't a crash.

  21. #4221
    Join Date
    May 2012
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    People's Republic of OB
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    Speaking of messes, anyone ever tried using Mil Kit valve stems? https://milkitbike.com/pages/faq

    I did a few years ago, seemed promising with a rubber valve that would prevent sealant from gumming up the valve cores, and a claim that you could check and re-fill sealant without letting air out of the tire. I can tell you the latter claim was bullshit. I let out half the air to be safe, then inserted the syringe tube through the valve stem and past the seal. Soon as I did that the air pressure blew the plunger back right out of the syringe along with all the sealant, half on me and half over my truck and garage wall. That was by far the worst mess I've ever dealt with. Worked great when all the air was out of the tire though, so it wasn't a total loss. But you couldn't use the little stans bottles with it so it was necessary to carry their plunger with you all the time.

  22. #4222
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    Jun 2008
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    SLCizzy
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    Sweet Jesus, you cheap bastards that scour Ali Express to save $10 and get shit shipped from 1/2way around the world haven’t quite figured out that the 2oz Stan’s bottle is the ultimate sealant injector. This thread is insane.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  23. #4223
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    Jan 2008
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    BC to CO
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    Quote Originally Posted by joetron View Post
    Sweet Jesus, you cheap bastards haven’t quite figured out that the 2oz Stan’s bottle is the ultimate sealant injector. This thread is insane.
    I fill up the 2oz bottle from the big bottle, and squeeze the 2oz into the valve stem.
    Easy.

  24. #4224
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    Jun 2008
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    SLCizzy
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dee Hubbs View Post
    I fill up the 2oz bottle from the big bottle, and squeeze the 2oz into the valve stem.
    Easy.
    EXACTLY!


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums

  25. #4225
    Join Date
    Mar 2022
    Posts
    23
    I spent three hours trying to replace two 32mm tires.

    I always try to seat a tire before adding sealant. One would seat with compressed air, then unseat as soon as the air came out, giving me no way to inject the sealant. I put soap on the bead. No luck. I tried mounting first with a tube, no luck. Finally thought that one through and put in the sealant before seating.

    The other would not seat even though the new tire is identical to the old one. I put a tube in, got one side seated but the other would not. I put soap on the bead. Mess but no luck. I tried a tube overnight. Still one side would not seat. I put sealant in and it still would not seat but did drip everywhere. Finally, I drained the sealant, took the tire off, cleaned it up, put on another layer of rim tape and it took first try.

    There are lots of suggestions for mounting tubeless but no flow chart to know what order to try.

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