I had an unopened jug of Orange Seal Endurance that I thought I had lost. Turns out it rolled under the front seat of a car that was parked down most of a year..
Honestly I think we all wish you would try it and let us know. Since mine often sits on my garage workbench for 6mos + and works fine, my guess yours will be fine. Too bad the car wasn’t driven as the agitation likely would be beneficial.
FranzFerdivan on
Does it still taste fine?
Ok-Ad5495 on
I have year old sealant in my bikes, and it seals fine, I dont think this would be any different.
Western_Truck7948 on
If it’s still liquid it should be good. The only thing that makes it not work is if it dries out.
sqwob on
Shake vigorously for at least 11 hours.
Sirwompus on
To you and everyone that uses sealant. Orange in particular. With these huge bottles that sit still the grit medium cakes hard on the bottom. I pull a few of these bottles from the shelf weekly at work and unless you slam the bottle on the ground the grit stays caked at the bottom. Seen junior mechanics just pour the latex out without any of the good stuff in suspension.
998876655433221 on
I have been using this stuff in my bikes for years but lately it’s been clogging my presta valves so much that I keep replacing the cores.
Also: didn’t answer the question
joelav on
If it’s been frozen I wouldn’t trust it. Otherwise yeah. I’m running it.
Sealant is relatively cheap. I’m pretty sure dealing with failed tubeless on the side of a trail is one of the circles of hell.
EmpunktAtze on
Forget it. Get a new bottle.
TYP14DABF on
I had a weird experience with orange seal a couple of years ago. Set my road bike up tubeless and that’s what I had for the mtb at the time so I stuck some in each wheel. The tyres were a pain to get on, and I don’t tend to change road tyres like I do mtb tyres, so that sealant ended up in there for at least 2 years. One day I decided to check them as I expected it would be all dried out, but what I found in each wheel was a clear oily liquid? Completely transparent, no signs of dried sealant or any grit. Only time I’ve ever seen that with sealant.
Full_Security7780 on
I’d shake it good and run it.
Adventureadverts on
It’s fine. Don’t forget to shake the ever living shit out of it.
Useless_or_inept on
It should be fine, but first you should shake the bottle like a baby that won’t stop crying.
guenhwyvar117 on
Left mine in the garage over winter. No bueno.
SpareIndependent4949 on
If the particulate will still integrate with a shake, it should be good. If the particulate stays clumped at the bottom, it’s probably not good.
16 Comments
It’s sealed so … I’d try it.
Honestly I think we all wish you would try it and let us know. Since mine often sits on my garage workbench for 6mos + and works fine, my guess yours will be fine. Too bad the car wasn’t driven as the agitation likely would be beneficial.
Does it still taste fine?
I have year old sealant in my bikes, and it seals fine, I dont think this would be any different.
If it’s still liquid it should be good. The only thing that makes it not work is if it dries out.
Shake vigorously for at least 11 hours.
To you and everyone that uses sealant. Orange in particular. With these huge bottles that sit still the grit medium cakes hard on the bottom. I pull a few of these bottles from the shelf weekly at work and unless you slam the bottle on the ground the grit stays caked at the bottom. Seen junior mechanics just pour the latex out without any of the good stuff in suspension.
I have been using this stuff in my bikes for years but lately it’s been clogging my presta valves so much that I keep replacing the cores.
Also: didn’t answer the question
If it’s been frozen I wouldn’t trust it. Otherwise yeah. I’m running it.
Sealant is relatively cheap. I’m pretty sure dealing with failed tubeless on the side of a trail is one of the circles of hell.
Forget it. Get a new bottle.
I had a weird experience with orange seal a couple of years ago. Set my road bike up tubeless and that’s what I had for the mtb at the time so I stuck some in each wheel. The tyres were a pain to get on, and I don’t tend to change road tyres like I do mtb tyres, so that sealant ended up in there for at least 2 years. One day I decided to check them as I expected it would be all dried out, but what I found in each wheel was a clear oily liquid? Completely transparent, no signs of dried sealant or any grit. Only time I’ve ever seen that with sealant.
I’d shake it good and run it.
It’s fine. Don’t forget to shake the ever living shit out of it.
It should be fine, but first you should shake the bottle like a baby that won’t stop crying.
Left mine in the garage over winter. No bueno.
If the particulate will still integrate with a shake, it should be good. If the particulate stays clumped at the bottom, it’s probably not good.