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01-23-2013, 02:30 AM
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#16 |
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toy4fun
Joined: Feb 2011
Location: Beautiful downtown Roy, WA
Oddometer: 37
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carry a bottle in my bags. used it once when i took a screw in the center of the rear tire and road the bike for 150 miles without incident. make sure you tell the guy fixin it you slimed it and you can not patch the tube, but who would want to. also, carry a spare tube just in case the slime fails.
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01-23-2013, 02:32 AM
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#17 |
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toy4fun
Joined: Feb 2011
Location: Beautiful downtown Roy, WA
Oddometer: 37
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and showkey, i used it on my 89 transalp what a great machine!!!
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01-23-2013, 03:32 AM
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#18 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Sep 2011
Oddometer: 279
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If by slime you really mean the product, Slime, as in the green stuff you pump in and leave, it's only mediocre in my experience. I've used it in wheelbarrows and lawn tractors and the like. It helped a bit on those that already had leaks. Generally though, after a trying Slime we'd replace the offending tire & tube. Never found it to work worth a darn on bead leaks or tubes. No experience with the pre-slimed or coated tubes.
If you mean generic fix-a-flat cans of goo, I've had them work ok on tubeless tires with a nail hole or such. Very messy, but reasonably effective. Will not work with a ruptured tube. As for other Slime like prevatives, I've had some work quite well, but most did not. I still have my tire plugs and tube patches, and they get used. Haven't been able to beat them with any cans of goo. I do tend to like the cans of goo in my lawnmower and wheelbarrow tires and such. Things that get ignored for months until they are flat. Seem to have less problems with them when gooed. |
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01-23-2013, 07:39 AM
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#19 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Apr 2010
Location: Middle Tennessee
Oddometer: 489
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Slime
I've used slime in my atv tires since 2005 and have had great luck as in no flats. Have also used it in the lawn tractor tires and no flats. I've also used the grey stuff from the co-op they pump out of a drum and it has also worked. On one atv I did have to plug a big hole with three plugs that finally sealed up and its holding air 3 years later. All of my experience has been with tubeless tires.
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01-23-2013, 07:52 AM
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#20 | |
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No Marks....
Joined: Sep 2009
Location: Michissippi & Nuevo Mexico
Oddometer: 1,610
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Quote:
Yes but several of those 50/50 are from Northern states where there are no prickly pear, ocotillo and mesquite thorns. All of us run it down in Southern NM or you would be changing tires constantly down here. Patches don't work on thorn penetration punctures.....5 miles later you just have a pinhole next to your patch! Who cares if it is messy? Change the tire and tube and toss it. If you don't like it there are several other brands to try. The last rear tube I changed had 5 thorn holes in it. Would you put on 5 patches? It will seal a hole as big as your valve stem (it tries to if you do not clear it with a QTip). If you don't use it in our desert bring tire spoons,a good pump, a gross of patches and patient riding buddies .
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01-23-2013, 08:47 AM
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#21 |
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Flydog
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Slime
I have not been happy with anything I have used of this brand. I haven't tried the sealer but I have had two Slime compressors not work and I haven't liked the guages either. I avoid them now.
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01-23-2013, 10:27 AM
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#22 |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2009
Location: Denmark
Oddometer: 841
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It saved me a couple of times, and the girlfriends bycicle should be sponsered by slime, have used it a lof of times with great results.
I really dont think its messy, very easy to wipe away
__________________
2003 xt600e 118.000km on stock motor. 1986 xt350 94.000km |
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01-24-2013, 09:15 PM
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#23 | |
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AdventureDeficitDisorder
Joined: May 2005
Location: San Diego, not Mex, but I can smell it from here.
Oddometer: 2,200
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Quote:
Fuxxing cactus.
__________________
To do is to be. Socrates To be is to do. Plato Do be do be do. Sinatra |
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