Second flat on the trike, on the way home tonight, this time from the valve stem being ripped off on teh right rear, wheel spinning inside the tire/tube due to slightly lower pressure from the colder weather (~50F at the time vs the 100F+ it was last inflated at).
IIRC the last time I had a valve stem tear off, it was also in much colder weather than when it had last been aired up (front wheel of CrazyBike2).
Guess I should learn my lesson now (finally) and remember to add pressure when the temperature drops.
FWIW, I don't think it wouldn't matter so much if it werent' for A) the weight on these things, and B) the motor acceleration and regen/EABS braking, which combine to try to drag the tires around the rim.
The problem actually started before I went to work, most likely, or on my way to work, because I discovered the issue when I was leaving work and found the right rear flat, with teh valve stem at a pretty steep angle vs the normal 90degrees to teh rim; no obvious damage or punctures, so figured it was probably the stem.
Still, I tried but couldn't air it up--compressor fought hard to try but air just never went into the tube at all. Couldn't hear air hiss over the compressor noise but I've seen this before, so I gave up trying and just rode it home flat, as it would take me 30-60 minutes to get the tube swapped out, and it'd be faster just to go home (and I was very tired; still am).
It was "lumpy" bumpy ride because tahere's two tires on there (one inside the other) plus teh non-inflated tube, which (because I was stupid enough to use the motor in that wheel instead of the other one) almsot immediately tore the rest of the stem off and probably wrinkled up inside the tire irregularly. At two points teh outer tire bead popped over the rim, and so it wouldn't damage (worse) that tire, I stopped and popped it back on.
Most of the ride was at about 10-12MPH, after haivng tried faster and been unable to take the thumping. :/
If you've ever skateboarded or skated down a sidewalk with slight differences in height between the segments, well, multiply that intensity by at least ten and that's about what it was like to ride home on this.
It honestly felt like there was a huge deep flat spot on the rim, or actively caved in like a Pac-Man shape, or as if I had run over a log and it was stuck on the wheel. :lol:
It didn't damage the wheel itself, though, or anything else on the trike, AFAICT.
After getting home and feedign the dogs, I went back out to at least see the damage, and was able to swap out the tube with some difficulty (it's cold out there (to me) at <50F and dropping, makes my joints ache and hands hard to use),
But I'll tell you that I'm damned glad it was on the side with the clamping dropout because that meant it only took about 30 seconds to actually remove the wheel--the other hour+ was spent getting tires off (just along the outer bead, not taking them fully off), and pulling out the old tube and stuffing in a new one, then getting the valve stem thru the rim hole, perpendicular, tires back on, aired up, etc.
But at least it's operational, and ready for tomorrow's work commute.
Oh, and I also aired up the other tires to make sure it doesn't happen to them...the left tube's stem was already at a bit of an angle, ready to start the same kidn of failure. :/ (had to de-air the tire and bit by bit drag teh tire/tube back the other way around the rim, which is not easy at all).
IIRC the last time I had a valve stem tear off, it was also in much colder weather than when it had last been aired up (front wheel of CrazyBike2).
Guess I should learn my lesson now (finally) and remember to add pressure when the temperature drops.
FWIW, I don't think it wouldn't matter so much if it werent' for A) the weight on these things, and B) the motor acceleration and regen/EABS braking, which combine to try to drag the tires around the rim.
The problem actually started before I went to work, most likely, or on my way to work, because I discovered the issue when I was leaving work and found the right rear flat, with teh valve stem at a pretty steep angle vs the normal 90degrees to teh rim; no obvious damage or punctures, so figured it was probably the stem.
Still, I tried but couldn't air it up--compressor fought hard to try but air just never went into the tube at all. Couldn't hear air hiss over the compressor noise but I've seen this before, so I gave up trying and just rode it home flat, as it would take me 30-60 minutes to get the tube swapped out, and it'd be faster just to go home (and I was very tired; still am).
It was "lumpy" bumpy ride because tahere's two tires on there (one inside the other) plus teh non-inflated tube, which (because I was stupid enough to use the motor in that wheel instead of the other one) almsot immediately tore the rest of the stem off and probably wrinkled up inside the tire irregularly. At two points teh outer tire bead popped over the rim, and so it wouldn't damage (worse) that tire, I stopped and popped it back on.
Most of the ride was at about 10-12MPH, after haivng tried faster and been unable to take the thumping. :/
If you've ever skateboarded or skated down a sidewalk with slight differences in height between the segments, well, multiply that intensity by at least ten and that's about what it was like to ride home on this.
It didn't damage the wheel itself, though, or anything else on the trike, AFAICT.
After getting home and feedign the dogs, I went back out to at least see the damage, and was able to swap out the tube with some difficulty (it's cold out there (to me) at <50F and dropping, makes my joints ache and hands hard to use),
But I'll tell you that I'm damned glad it was on the side with the clamping dropout because that meant it only took about 30 seconds to actually remove the wheel--the other hour+ was spent getting tires off (just along the outer bead, not taking them fully off), and pulling out the old tube and stuffing in a new one, then getting the valve stem thru the rim hole, perpendicular, tires back on, aired up, etc.
But at least it's operational, and ready for tomorrow's work commute.
Oh, and I also aired up the other tires to make sure it doesn't happen to them...the left tube's stem was already at a bit of an angle, ready to start the same kidn of failure. :/ (had to de-air the tire and bit by bit drag teh tire/tube back the other way around the rim, which is not easy at all).