While many new mountain bike wheels ship as “tubeless ready”, you can actually convert your existing wheels to a tubeless system. There's no reason to get rid of it and many tubeless kits recommend using two layers of their tape if you do remove it. Old tires, tubes, and rim tape.
Almost any combination of wheels and tires can be transformed using a tubeless conversion kit. The setup ranges from simple to challenging, because air can find more places to leak in non-tubeless-ready components. Conversion kits cost about $70, though you can cut that cost by purchasing components individually.
Still May Need to Carry a Tube
The main drawback with a tubeless tire system is that repairs are not simple. While tubeless tires are resistant to pinch flats and nearly always contain tire sealant, a flat tire is still always a possibility.At minimum, you should replace the sealant every 6 months or so. As you have found, a good tubeless setup will stay inflated well beyond that time, as the latex in the sealant has already sealed any small holes.
With some tubeless ready wheels you need to remove the basic rim tape and install a special rim strip. You might get away with regular rims but you definitely need proper tubeless tyres. A regular tyre uses an aramid bead, and without an inner tube, can blow off the rim at high pressure.
Since they don't have an inner tube they're lighter and finally — and most compellingly — they are fast! Road tubeless tyres' rolling resistance is lower than that of both clinchers and tubulars due to the friction between inner tube and casing being eliminated.
The DT Swiss 350 line offers the same manufacturing quality and design features found in its higher end counterpart, the DT Swiss 240s. The main difference between the hub lines stems from the fact that the 240s has been machine optimized for weight savings and the 350 has not.
Ownership of DT Swiss Group Changed. BIEL, Switzerland – DT Swiss, one of the biggest bike parts makers in Europe, changed its ownership. The company's longstanding CEO and Chairman Marco Zingg has sold his shares to his two business partners Frank Böckmann and Maurizio D'Alberto.
In addition to DT Swiss' headquarters in Biel-Bienne, Switzerland, the company has production and sales sites in five other countries: Taiwan, Germany, United States, France, and Poland.
Take the inner width of your rim and add 3 to 5 millimeters - that's your tape width. The tape should be wide enough to sit on both tire bead shelves and lay flat in the center channel of the rim.
The first step for many tubeless installs is rim tape. Stan's and Schwalbe make their own tape and others like Enve put their name on Gorilla tape and have it cut to size. Unless you have a non-perforated rim (high five to you!) you are going to have to install something.
Rim tape is essential to protect the from punctures caused by the tube expanding into recessed spoke holes, from pinch flats on the sharp edges of the spoke holes or from scratches or imperfections on the inner rim.
UST rims don't need tape as they don't have holes in the rimbed to seal up. Most 'tubeless' rims – including Stans' – are better described as 'Tubeless Ready' as they have a suitable beadhook and a fairly high, smooth rim bed but need tape and sealant to produce a tubless wheel..
Rims are advertised as Tubeless Ready (with holes) or UST (without holes). The rim is called tubeless-ready because of the bead lock design that helps to seal the tire onto the rim once inflated. Without Holes - Tubeless Rims. Tubeless rims do not have access holes on the center channel, just a solid piece of material.
How to go tubeless - YouTube
Velox Rim Tape
- Made in France, Velox is widely considered to be the best cloth rim tape you can buy.
- What size does Velox come in?
- Velox comes in two primary sizes, 16mm and 22mm.
- The 16mm width is most often used for road and hybrid wheels while the 22mm is used for wider mountain bike rims.