Maintenance & Repair

Fixing a Roadside Puncture Without the Panic

A flat far from home need not ruin your ride. This calm, step-by-step method covers removing the tyre, fitting a tube, and getting rolling again fast.

Rider repairing a flat tyre
Photograph via Unsplash

There is a particular sound a rear tyre makes when it lets go on a fast descent, and the first time you hear it your stomach drops. I have changed hundreds of flats over the years, in car parks, on canal towpaths, and once in the dark with a phone torch held in my teeth, and I can tell you the panic is the only part of the job that ever really hurts you. Get calm, work in order, and a roadside puncture becomes a ten-minute pause rather than a walk of shame.

First, Get Off the Road and Breathe#

The single most common mistake I see is riders trying to fix a flat exactly where it happened, half a metre from moving traffic, fingers already fumbling. Don't. A flat tyre is not an emergency and nothing about it gets worse in the thirty seconds it takes to find a safe spot.

  • Ease off the pedals and let the bike slow naturally rather than braking hard on a soft tyre, which can roll the tyre off the rim.
  • Look for a flat, visible, off-road spot: a gateway, a wide verge, a bus shelter, the mouth of a side lane.
  • Stand where oncoming drivers can see you and your bike, ideally with the bike between you and the road.

Once you are somewhere sensible, take a genuine breath. I mean it. The job goes faster when your hands aren't shaking, and you are far less likely to skip the step that actually matters, which we'll get to.

Get the Wheel Off Cleanly#

Shift the chain onto the smallest rear sprocket before you touch anything if it's the back wheel. It gives the derailleur more slack and makes both removal and refitting far less of a wrestle.

  1. Open the brake if you're running rim brakes (a quick-release lever on the caliper), or don't worry about it with discs.
  2. Open the wheel's quick-release or undo the thru-axle.
  3. For the rear, pull the derailleur body back with one hand and lift the wheel up and out with the other so the cassette clears the chain.

Lay the wheel down somewhere clean if you can. If it's a disc-brake bike, don't squeeze the brake lever while the wheel is out, or the pads will close and you'll have a fiddly job forcing the rotor back in.

Find the Cause Before You Touch the Tube#

This is the step riders skip when they panic, and it's the step that saves you from doing the whole job twice by the next hedge. A tube doesn't deflate on its own. Something caused it, and until you know what, you cannot trust that a fresh tube won't meet the same fate.

Before you fully deflate and remove the old tube, if there's any air left, listen and feel for where it's escaping. That gives you a rough clock position on the tyre. Then:

  • Run your fingers gently around the inside of the tyre casing. Gently is the operative word, because if a thorn or shard of glass is still embedded, you want to find it, not donate a fingertip to it.
  • Look at the outside tread for the obvious offender: a flint, a staple, a fleck of glass catching the light.
  • Note where on the tube the hole is. A hole on the outer face usually means something came through the tread. Two neat holes side by side on the rim side is a pinch flat, or "snakebite," from hitting something hard with too-soft a tyre.

Reading the flat tells you what to fix#

If it's a pinch flat, the tyre is fine and the real problem is your pressure or your line choice over that pothole. If it's a puncture, you must remove the object or the new tube dies in minutes. I have watched people fit three tubes in a row cursing their luck when a splinter of glass was sitting in the casing the whole time.

Fit the New Tube#

Assuming you carry a spare tube (you should, and I'll come back to that), fitting it is straightforward once the tyre is off on one side.

  1. Use tyre levers to unhook one bead. Hook one lever under the bead and clip it to a spoke, then work a second lever around. Leave the other bead seated.
  2. Pull out the dead tube.
  3. Put a little air into the new tube first, just enough to give it shape. A limp tube twists and gets pinched under the bead; a lightly inflated one sits obediently.
  4. Seat the valve straight through the valve hole, then tuck the rest of the tube up inside the tyre all the way round.
  5. Work the bead back over the rim with your thumbs, starting at the valve and finishing opposite it. Push the valve up into the tyre slightly at the end so the bead isn't trapped on the valve stem.

The one thing that prevents a pinch on inflation#

Before you inflate properly, squeeze the tyre and run your eye all the way round both sides to check no tube is peeking out from under the bead. That grey line of tube showing between tyre and rim is exactly what explodes on you at 60 psi with a bang that scatters cows. If you spot any, deflate slightly and push the tube up out of the way.

Try to avoid finishing with levers if you can help it, because that's the moment you most often nip the tube. If the last bit of bead is genuinely too tight for thumbs, let all the air back out of the tube first, work the slack around, and try again.

Inflate, Check, and Reinstall#

Bring the tyre up to pressure in stages, not one frantic burst.

  • Get it to a low pressure first, then stop and eyeball the bead all the way round on both sides. There's usually a moulded line on the tyre sidewall just above the rim; when that line sits even and parallel the whole way round, the bead is seated correctly.
  • If one section is bulging or dipping, deflate, work that spot with your thumbs, and try again.
  • Then take it up to your riding pressure.

A hand pump is hard graft and honest work; you'll get a rear tyre to a firm, ridable pressure but rarely to your ideal number, and that's fine. A CO2 inflator is faster and gets you closer, but it's a one-shot deal per cartridge, so don't waste it testing. My habit is to seat the bead with a few pump strokes, confirm it's sitting right, and only then commit the CO2.

Refit the wheel, close the quick-release or torque the axle, re-latch the rim brake if you opened it, and spin the wheel to check it runs true and the brake isn't rubbing.

What to Actually Carry#

A roadside repair is only calm if you've got the kit, and the kit is small.

  • A spare tube in the correct size and with the right valve, plus ideally a second, because the day you use one is the day you find a second thorn.
  • Two tyre levers. Plastic, so you don't gouge the rim.
  • A pump or CO2 inflator with cartridges. Test your pump at home; a pump that leaks at the valve in your garage will betray you in the rain.
  • A patch kit as your backup for the backup. Self-adhesive patches are quick but temporary; the traditional glue-and-vulcanise patches make a proper permanent repair if you've the time.
  • Optionally, a tyre boot or even a folded banknote to line the inside of the casing if you've cut the tyre itself, not just the tube.

When the tyre, not the tube, is the problem#

If you find a gash in the casing big enough to poke through, a new tube alone won't hold; it'll bulge out of the cut and blow. Line the inside of the tyre over the cut with a boot, an energy-bar wrapper, or that folded note, seat the tube behind it, and ride home gently at lower pressure. It's a limp-home fix, not a permanent one, so replace the tyre when you're back.

Get Rolling Again#

Do a slow first hundred metres and listen. A tyre that's going to fail again from a missed thorn or a pinched tube usually tells you within the first minute, and it's far better to learn that while you're still standing near your tools than a mile down the road.

The whole business, done calmly and in order, is genuinely a ten-minute job: safe spot, wheel off, find the cause, fit the tube, seat the bead, check, inflate, go. The riders who dread punctures are almost always the ones who've never practised one at home in the dry with a cup of tea to hand. Do that once, unhurried, and the next time it happens for real on a cold verge, your hands will already know the way. The panic, it turns out, was always the only thing that was ever actually flat.

Jayden Cole
Written by
Jayden Cole

Jayden spent years as a bike-shop mechanic and still gets a quiet satisfaction from a perfectly indexed drivetrain. He explains repairs the way he'd show a friend across the workstand — plainly, step by step, so you can do it yourself and trust the result.

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