Maintenance & Repair
Setting Up Tubeless Tyres: A Step-by-Step Walkthrough
Going tubeless cuts flats and improves grip, but setup trips people up. This walkthrough covers tape, sealant, seating the bead, and avoiding mess.
Maintenance & Repair
Going tubeless cuts flats and improves grip, but setup trips people up. This walkthrough covers tape, sealant, seating the bead, and avoiding mess.
I put off going tubeless for years because the internet made it sound like a black art involving soapy water, swearing, and a garage floor covered in latex. The truth is more boring than that: it's a fussy job the first time and a fifteen-minute one after that. What follows is the process I've settled on after setting up wheels for myself, for friends who'd rather buy me a beer than do it themselves, and for a fair few "it won't seal, help" rescue jobs.
Before you commit an afternoon to this, it's worth being honest about what you're actually buying. Tubeless isn't magic, but the benefits are real if your riding suits it.
The trade-offs: setup is more involved, sealant needs topping up, and a big gash still means fitting a tube by the roadside with your hands covered in latex. If you're a rider who gets flats regularly or likes running low pressures on rough roads and gravel, tubeless earns its keep. If you're pumping up once a month and rarely puncture, tubes are genuinely fine.
Get everything laid out before you start. Nothing derails a tubeless setup like hunting for scissors while the sealant clock is ticking.
This is the step people rush and then pay for later. A bad tape job is behind the majority of "it won't hold air" problems I get called about.
Start with a clean, dry rim bed. Wipe it out with a rag and, if it's an old wheel, a bit of isopropyl alcohol to lift any grease. The tape needs a spotless surface to stick to.
Too narrow and air sneaks around the edges; too wide and the tape rides up the bead walls where the tyre needs to sit. You want the tape to cover the rim bed and just kiss the base of the sidewalls. If your rim's internal width is 21 mm, a 21 mm tape is about right — err slightly wide rather than narrow if you're between sizes.
Once taped, find the valve hole by feel, then pierce the tape with something sharp — I use the valve stem itself pushed through firmly, or a small awl. Make a small hole and let the valve stretch it, rather than cutting a big cross.
Push the valve through the hole from inside the rim and tighten the lockring by hand. Snug, not gorilla-tight — overtightening can deform the tape seal or crack the rim tape over time. A wobble-free valve is all you need.
Now fit one side of the tyre onto the rim, leaving the other bead off so you have an opening to work with. If the tyre is directional, check the rotation arrow now — refitting later because you ran it backwards is a special kind of annoying.
There are two schools here, and I've come around to one of them.
I now do it through the valve nine times out of ten, because seating a dry tyre is easier and less messy. Seat first, sealant second.
Follow the guidance on the bottle for your tyre size, but as a rough guide: a road tyre wants a smaller dose, a wide gravel or MTB tyre wants noticeably more. Under-dosing is a common mistake — too little and it dries out fast and won't seal a puncture when you need it. Porous or larger tyres and dry, hot climates all argue for the upper end of the range. When in doubt, a touch more won't hurt; a puddle rolling around the rim will.
This is the moment tubeless earns its dramatic reputation, and it's mostly about air volume, not pressure.
Once seated, reinstall the valve core if you removed it, and bring the tyre to your riding pressure. Now spread the sealant around: hold the wheel and rotate it, then lay it flat and give it a spin, then flip and repeat. Shaking and rolling the wheel coats the whole inner surface and lets sealant find any weeping spots.
You'll often see a bit of bubbling at the bead or through the sidewall on a fresh setup — that's the sealant doing its job, and it usually stops within a few minutes of rolling the tyre. Leave the wheel overnight and check the pressure in the morning. A small overnight drop is normal; a flat tyre means the seal or tape has failed and it's worth revisiting rather than ignoring.
The setup is the hard part. The upkeep is easy but not zero.
The first tubeless setup is genuinely fiddly, and if yours takes two attempts and a bit of language you wouldn't use in front of your mum, you're doing fine — so did I. Get the tape right, use enough sealant, and beg or borrow a charger pump for seating, and the rest falls into place. After that first wheel, the process stops being a project and becomes a routine you can knock out on a weeknight. And the first time you finish a ride, spot a thorn embedded in the tread, and realise it never even lost pressure, the whole fussy business suddenly makes sense.
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