eric1115
Adventurer
I have a question for all you guys and gals with Powertank setups...
I use a C02 inflator for on-the-trail mountain bike fixes (a 16g cartridge will fill a bicycle tire perfectly), but after that fix, I need to deflate the tire and refill with air once I'm back home. If I leave the C02 fill in the tire, it deflates over the course of a day or two. It's more pronounced with a conventional tire and butyl tube on a road bike than it is with my tubeless/sealant mountain bike setup, but still there. Unless I'm misinformed, C02 molecules are smaller than nitrogen molecules, and therefore move through the walls of a tube or tire more quickly.
Do you notice needing to top off more often with C02? Do most of you air down and back up often enough that it doesn't come into play? Or, are we just dealing with thick enough material that it doesn't have any appreciable leak down?
Eric
I use a C02 inflator for on-the-trail mountain bike fixes (a 16g cartridge will fill a bicycle tire perfectly), but after that fix, I need to deflate the tire and refill with air once I'm back home. If I leave the C02 fill in the tire, it deflates over the course of a day or two. It's more pronounced with a conventional tire and butyl tube on a road bike than it is with my tubeless/sealant mountain bike setup, but still there. Unless I'm misinformed, C02 molecules are smaller than nitrogen molecules, and therefore move through the walls of a tube or tire more quickly.
Do you notice needing to top off more often with C02? Do most of you air down and back up often enough that it doesn't come into play? Or, are we just dealing with thick enough material that it doesn't have any appreciable leak down?
Eric