I am relatively new to biking in this winter weather. I commute 8-10 miles one way, depending on the route, then leave my bike outside (covered thankfully) while at work. I keep it inside at home.
I got a flat over the weekend and was planning to patch the tube. Has anyone had problems with patch integrity in the cold? I am not finding much on this one way or the other.
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Patching a tube optimally requires clean, dry, warm and time. 3 of which are certain to be seldom outside till April. Carry a spare tube and patch the other indoors and later.
Ride on,
Eric
Smart Bike Parts suggestion is a great one. Patching a tube in the field can be a struggle even in the best of conditions.
As for the integrity of the patch - I've never had any patches fail due to cold weather and I'm usually running with a lot of patches on my rear tube.
Why risk it? There are few things that suck worse than having to fix a flat tire in subfreezing temperatures next to a snowdrift in the dark (speaking from experience). Paying a few extra bucks to have a new tube on hand would be worth it to me.
+1
Smart Bike Parts said:
Carry a spare tube and patch the other indoors and later.
Light the glue with a bic lighter to warm the glue and dry it? Then apply the patch?
Now that you definitely DO want to do outside :)
Mike Schwab said:
Light the glue with a bic lighter to warm the glue and dry it? Then apply the patch?
Tell me you framed it! I've been known to take patching to the limit but I think the most I've had is perhaps 5 or 6.
KevinM said:
My personal record is 11 patches on a single tube. I rode that guy year round for quite a while before the valve core eventually sheared off.
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