• Hi everyone,

    As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.

    When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.

    Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

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    Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.

    Thanks for your patience and support!

Rim lock or not?

naga;4218 said:
I run 2 with a trials tire - with one rim lock I was spinning valve stems off on flat even ground. I have pinch flatted - always with trials tires, always with less than 8psi - but the pinch has never been at the rim lock.

However, with 2 rim locks you can keep going - it's not good for the tire and you may want to dodge the bigger rocks. I ran 40 miles of the 2007 Virginia City GP with a rear flat - passing people on every climb (rim looked like @#@ after, but...)

Tire balls are looking better and better

+1 on what you said, although I've not had luck keeping a rear trials tire on the rim when flat, no matter how many rim locks I've got on there. I just carry a few of those humongous zip-ties like the HVAC guys use. They work great at keeping the tire in the general vicinity of the rim while getting back to camp if it's not fixable on the trail.


WoodsChick
 
BMWHusky Atlanta;4210 said:
I run 2 bead locks in the rear and am perfectly fine running one in the front. I have still managed to do 70mph on a lake bed with a blown front and only one BL chasing Jimmy Lewis outside Primm Nevada, after that experience I had a couple of pinch flats in the rear on a wheel with only one BL and found that without two BL's in the rear, you're not riding on a rear flat for very long or very safely.

You had a flat front tire, 1 rim lock, and you kept going?

At least you didn't have a semi behind you on a freeway...
 
hammer;4177 said:
If you would like to balance the Teraflex turn the tire on the rim a 1/4 turn at a time until you get it down to a reasonable weight then add your wheel weights. No tire should take a pound of weight. I have been a Tech for over 20 years and never installed or even heard of a wheel taking that kind of weight.

Ya what he said Very very smart... but I run two locks....
 
I always run 2 bead locks and 18 to 20 psi even on my 125 .Did not get a single rear flat all year only one front flat it also had 18psi and 1 bead lock.Also run ultra heavy dudy tubes.As for tuff tires i have run the following
Dunlop desert great tire can keep going when flat but cost alot
Pirelli MT 18 HD also great tire wears out fast but you can still keep going when flat
Maxxis Desert is what i run most of the time Cheap and last forever very few flats
BUT when you get a flat it is very hard to keep it on the rim
But for the price and the fact they last and i only get a flat ever few years i take the chance.Did Vegas to Reno last year in 4 stroke pro class and one tire went the distance and looked good at the finish
 
Ajax interesting,,, one of the Euros I know (former It trophy team and Dakar guy) said the same using the FIM tires run @ 18 psi , 1.2 bar, in both tires with UHD tubes,,,,or they used the mousses, most preferred UHD tubes at higher pressures. Dang you dez guys run from another page!!
Me on the trail usually 12 in the front and 10 or even single digit in the rear,,at the moment with Michelin UHD and Michelin S12s. I may try M12s for the wickenburg enduro. any suggestions I want good rock traction without a tire that digs too much (trenches)into the sandy stuff like my 403/404 Bridge combo (shelved). You guys all may think I am nuts but I may rum a fat FIM 140/80 rear again (OEM TXC style) low knobs but that thing floated over the sand and got good traction on loose climbs. I will see the Italian this coming weekend and ask his opinion as well .

stop this was a rim lock thread,,which reminds me my shraeders are both pulling a bit need to drop air loosen the rim locks and slip the tire/tube back to straighten the valves F and R. thats with one rim lock each and tight but still get a little tire slippage after a while.
 
Coffee;4233 said:
You had a flat front tire, 1 rim lock, and you kept going?

At least you didn't have a semi behind you on a freeway...

actually it was really no big deal on the front flat, just had to watch out for any rock edges jutting out from the desert. Didn't work so well in the single track type stuff, but on the fire roads getting out of the desert it was no big deal. Out of a group of 9 or so, Jimmy Lewis was the only one I wasn't going to pass and the rest of the group had no idea the front was toast. I did spit out the rubber rim tape though after about 3 miles of a flat.

Much like cars, a rear flat is typically much more dangerous then a front flat I have found, dirt or street.
 
BMWHusky Atlanta;4317 said:
actually it was really no big deal on the front flat, just had to watch out for any rock edges jutting out from the desert. Didn't work so well in the single track type stuff, but on the fire roads getting out of the desert it was no big deal. Out of a group of 9 or so, Jimmy Lewis was the only one I wasn't going to pass and the rest of the group had no idea the front was toast. I did spit out the rubber rim tape though after about 3 miles of a flat.

Much like cars, a rear flat is typically much more dangerous then a front flat I have found, dirt or street.


Wow... think I'll just continue to slow down and stop. You're a better rider than I am.
 
BMWHusky Atlanta;4317 said:
actually it was really no big deal on the front flat, just had to watch out for any rock edges jutting out from the desert. Didn't work so well in the single track type stuff, but on the fire roads getting out of the desert it was no big deal. Out of a group of 9 or so, Jimmy Lewis was the only one I wasn't going to pass and the rest of the group had no idea the front was toast. I did spit out the rubber rim tape though after about 3 miles of a flat.

Much like cars, a rear flat is typically much more dangerous then a front flat I have found, dirt or street.

Yep I agree 100%. If you loose the front you have some control with the steering, if you loose the rear it can get out of shape before you can correct.
 
I had no problem running 8 miles after a front valve stem seperated from the tube while using the factory supplies OEM Michelin Enduro III on the TE with the factory supplied (one) rim lock. I did keep my speed to less than 20 mph and all 8 miles were offroad in a sandy environment. The rim strip did snap and peeled off also.
 
Well ok since you people don't think getting a flat is a big deal - why don't you avoid putting front tires on at all and save some $?

LOL
 
OK so I want to do 2 rim locks but have only one hole. Do I just drill out a second one for the valve and use the valve hole for the second lock or there is some kind of a tool to do it?
 
ElDiablo;5181 said:
OK so I want to do 2 rim locks but have only one hole. Do I just drill out a second one for the valve and use the valve hole for the second lock or there is some kind of a tool to do it?
I used the valve stem hole for the second rim lock because it was 180 degrees opposite the factory one, then just drilled a hole half way between the two locks, real easy to do. I centre punched a hole between two spokes dead center of the rim, used a 1\8 for a pilot hole then duplicated the valve stem hole size (can't remember exact size offhand). :cheers:
 
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