I purchased a road bike that is a lemon I'm afraid.
I noticed I could hardly pump up the rear wheel because the inner tube would actual push out and push a small part of the tyre off the rim.
Decided to run the rear tyre with a softer pressure at around 80-90psi, when riding obviously with my weight the pressure was too much and caused a part of the rim to jump off this must have caused the inner tube to pinch because with an almighty bang it went and I ended up walking the bike home.
Question is did this happen because my inner tube was oversized? The tyres look fairly new so would be surprised if it was an issue with the tyres?
You have typing errors so I'm not sure exactly what happened, but we need to know what size tire & what rim width, what size tube & how much you weigh.
We also need confirmation that the rim has a lip and is not an old straight wall "hookless".
not likely an oversize inner tube.
most likely - hookless rims as mentioned above, followed by poor installation.
I have no trouble using a 35-45 thorn resistant tube in a 28 tire at over 100 psi. Rim is hooked.
not likely an oversize inner tube.
most likely - hookless rims as mentioned above, followed by poor installation.
I have no trouble using a 35-45 thorn resistant tube in a 28 tire at over 100 psi. Rim is hooked.
Nigel
I am confused what did the rim jump off of. Maybe the tire slipped out of the rim? If the rim jumped of you have a broken wheel.
Yes some stats would be helpful. What bike, what rim look at rim for stamp, etc.... BTW its not the whole bike that's a lemon if the tire blows.....
Photo of rim inside edges?
Never Give Up!!!
Hey Nigel I thing your send button is stuck, you are double posting.
As per bike its good to know where you are when you post as locals may have better familiarity with whats available.
Look inside rim carefully, are the sides smooth or do the have a lip on the outer edge. As per bike if its such a mess I hope you did not pay a lot for it. The frame sounds OK if its good quality and butted 531.(different inside thickness for strength where needed and thin where not needed)
Never Give Up!!!
A tire in that condition will definitely let the tube blow out, you have to replace it.
Note that it looks to me like you have steel rims which may have straight, and not hooked inner walls. If so, they're still perfectly ridable, but you have to be a bit more cautious mounting the tire to make sure it is even all the way around. And you probably cannot go super narrow or high pressure on the tires. Check the inside of the rims for burrs or rough edges that might need to be sanded.
If I'm right and those are steel rims, there's no way they're the original wheels on a 531 frame bike. Low end and/or old replacements.
Which came first, the Bicycle or the Hammer? LOL
Wheelies don't pop themselves. (from a QBP fortune cookie)