I'm a bike commuter. On my regular route I started getting one or two punctures a day, mostly from tiny glass shards, so I decided to learn to set up my wheels to tubeless.
I watched countless of videos about it on youtube, I read forum posts about best practices and techniques and I swear I tried to follow them the best I could and still no success.
The first time I used a Muc-Off kit (which turned out to be a mistake, since the rim tape left an almost unremovable residue on the rim and it was a pain in the ass to clean it off), then I bought a large bottle of Peaty's sealant, WTB rim tape and Peaty's valves. I've also tried three different tyres: Goodyear Connector (came with my bike), Pathfinder Pros (which I used of the last 3 months) and lastly unused, brand new out of the box Gravelking SK+ TLRs (I used the TLC ones with tubes on my previous bike and never had a puncture with them; if everything fails I'll fall back to these). The wheels are Sonder Nova alloy, tubeless ready wheels.
I don't think I applied rim tape or installed valves any worse or different than shown in these videos:

https://youtu.be/hAhQ40J1i3o?si=46ESQ0CljA4VINUd&t=120

https://youtu.be/bzAXCsT8U_A?si=QPH-yQ6NMZIvVCBQ

My very first attempt was no different to what this guy's doing:

https://youtu.be/ZHXF_kRfb5M?si=U6DU2-poghcgEBDT

I also tried putting in an inner tube first to press down the rim tape evenly everywhere. I used about 60-80 ml sealant per tyre and inflated them to 40 psi. I checked and made sure that the beads popped in place properly. No sealant was leaking anywhere. No visible or audible air leak.

And yet the result is always the same: the tyre slowly loses pressure and deflates completely in half an hour. Even after 2-3 days and 6-8 20 minute rides. It's just enough for me to get to my workplace but nothing more. What do I do wrong? Or does it take several days until it starts working?

by Unique_Ad_1188

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6 Comments

  1. Myissueisyou on

    [https://youtu.be/sYwj473fGgk](https://youtu.be/sYwj473fGgk)

    I followed that dudes guide, double wrapped (triple over the valve) and pressed in hard all the way around with a tyre lever.

    Then once sealant is in rotate and lay each wheel on it’s side to coat the sidewalls and fill all the tiny gaps.

    I used muc off tape, sealant and valves, two different bikes a year ago first go and they’re both still holding well.

  2. There is a break in period with new tubeless setups. Everything needs to seal up.

    However that usually doesn’t take longer than one ride – you’ve definitely got an issue.

    Valve core not being fully screwed in? Rim tape issue? You can fully inflate the tire – spray everywhere with soapy water and you should see bubbles wherever the leak is.

  3. jedienginenerd on

    Do you have a bottle of soapy water in a spray bottle? A leak that bad would blow some pretty serious bubbles. Bubbles at Spoke holes means it’s your tape that’s the problem. Otherwise you might find a valve tire or rim that’s leaking. You’ll need to wet the whole rim and every spoke hole with the soapy water (use a little dish soap)

  4. Put the inflated tire in water and find out where the leak is. If it’s from the spokes your tubeless tape is too narrow and might have a leak.

    If it’s from the valve it’s probably not seated well

    If it’s from the tire, self explanatory

  5. Have you tried spraying your tire + wheel with soap to see where the leak is? The leak is probably somewhere in the tape. 

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