("Baby Powder"= Talc + Scent OK for tube/tire?)
Been working off the same plastic bottle of it for bicycle tubes for about 20 years. Some use talc. Some don't. (I found one case without where a rough textured tire carcass interior seemed to abrade a leak into the tube. Thinking talc may migrate into the low spots to smooth out the carcass surface some.) In some bicycle without cases, the tube gets so stuck to the carcass that it obviously could not abrade...but that would be more likely with smooth carcass.
Weis branded Johnson and Johnson "Hypoallerginc" with that characteristic strong someone-changed-a-baby scent. Hoping whatever it is won't eat "rubber."
Application is Avon 90/90-18 AM26 (51V) in original tube-type aluminum rims at both ends of an R27.
"Baby Powder"= Talc + Scent OK for tube/tire?
-
- Posts: 8900
- Joined: Tue Aug 03, 2010 1:46 pm
Re: "Baby Powder"= Talc + Scent OK for tube/tire?
Never heard of a scented talc eating rubber, and I would think synthetic rubber would be especially immune. I wouldn't worry about it.
Personally, I don't talc, I lube.
Personally, I don't talc, I lube.
MS - out
Re: "Baby Powder"= Talc + Scent OK for tube/tire?
I've used shampoo when stuck on the side of the road.
When I installed the same sized Avons on my R26, I used dish detergent. That was about 3 years ago and they haven't fallen off yet.
When I installed the same sized Avons on my R26, I used dish detergent. That was about 3 years ago and they haven't fallen off yet.
Garnet
Re: "Baby Powder"= Talc + Scent OK for tube/tire?
Cornflower - you don't have to pay for the Johnson & Johnson labelling.