10 Tyre Inserts - Tested and Reviewed

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
  • Read the round up here, or go to the full review of each insert:
    Round up: singletrackworld.com/2020/03/...
    Huck Norris: singletrackworld.com/2017/07/...
    RockStop Tubeless Insert: singletrackworld.com/2019/09/...
    Rimpact: singletrackworld.com/2019/05/...
    Procore: singletrackworld.com/2016/09/...
    Pepi’s Rokkline Tire Noodles: singletrackworld.com/2019/09/...
    Vittoria Air Liner: singletrackworld.com/2018/11/...
    Nukeproof ARD: singletrackworld.com/2019/03/...
    Flat Tire Defender: singletrackworld.com/2019/02/...
    CushCore: singletrackworld.com/2018/11/...
    Panzer: singletrackworld.com/2019/01/...
  • Sport

Komentáře • 66

  • @GallantLee
    @GallantLee Před 4 lety +58

    Wait... this wasn’t much of a review. More of a quick look at.

  • @PedalCrusaders
    @PedalCrusaders Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent excellent video! And always nice to find other mtb CZcams’s!

  • @hardmtnbiker
    @hardmtnbiker Před 4 lety +7

    Thanks for the review, I’m deciding on which one to use on my hardtail’s.

    • @hardmtnbiker
      @hardmtnbiker Před 4 lety +3

      I bought Rimpact! They’re a great company, the price is right, the standard insert is a nice form and good quality material. The valve stem has side ports into the rim so it doesn’t get blocked off by the insert. If they made a thinner insert it would probably work good because the material they use is dense.

    • @michaelshaggins5842
      @michaelshaggins5842 Před 4 lety

      procore hands down

  • @chrisfontaine6221
    @chrisfontaine6221 Před 4 lety +4

    I've had my Tannus armour tube protector for over a year in a cheap casing Noby Nick and have had no flats or rim dings. The tire casing had a couple rock cuts right through the tread but never lost air, can run PSI close to tubeless pressures. Is a great set up with no muck to mess around with.

    • @JasonTankard
      @JasonTankard Před 4 lety +2

      I had heard they are not as great on rim protection, but they would be nice in that easier to fix trailside and actually put me back on tubes for simplicity... though they are a heavier option than even cushcore.. Once I see how things go with my cushcore test I may have to considder trying these if either of my other tests don't go as well. I have a couple of others locally trying these out, so keen to hear their longer term reviews. One of which runs the local mtb training group, and he rides some pretty rough stuff and does big jumps and drops.

    • @chrisfontaine6221
      @chrisfontaine6221 Před 4 lety +2

      I've been hammering our local black diamond XC/enduro trails with it here on Vancouver island so far so good, never felt the rim. I'm about to take some air pressure out for a day of pure DH bliss at Mt Washington Ha so that will be a good test for rim protection. The weight doesn't feel any more than the old DH tubes I used to run, maybe less.

    • @Chungustav
      @Chungustav Před 2 lety +1

      I've heard they compress and are useless after a short time

    • @chrisfontaine6221
      @chrisfontaine6221 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Chungustav Ha maybe if you run it at next to no air pressure, I've had mine for years now and its still good, I had it on my old DH bike for a season then put it back in my Enduro, I've only had 1 flat with it but pressure was well below 10 psi and it was a pretty crazy section of trail

  • @mtbville
    @mtbville Před 3 lety

    This was excellent video 🤙

  • @TheBikeRoom
    @TheBikeRoom Před 4 lety +2

    Good review. I’m currently trying out builders backer-rod closed-cell foam. I’ve removed one to check after a winter’s riding and only one tiny mark on the front one but the rim did take a small ding, I run lower pressure during winter due to amount of mud on the local trails.

    • @HindsightFPV
      @HindsightFPV Před 4 lety

      I have a set of rims that have backer rod in them going on 18 months with great results.

  • @haydendec6991
    @haydendec6991 Před 4 lety +2

    I've heard the Nukeproof ARD stretches? Is that true? Did you guys notice this?

  • @dancing8595
    @dancing8595 Před rokem +2

    Great video. Please add Tubolight and Tannus in the next one.

  • @Sheddymiata
    @Sheddymiata Před 3 lety +1

    I'm using ard front and air liner rear on mine

  • @GG-333
    @GG-333 Před 3 lety +2

    What is the best of them for a road bike 😅

  • @garnetsteen
    @garnetsteen Před 4 lety

    Are all of these for running tubeless? I get a lot of flats running 700x38 on my hybrid bike and am going to move up to 700x47, running lower pressure and am considering RhinoDillos or something similar but was considering some of these options as a way to prevent flats. I'm less concerned with rim protection as I'm not hitting rocks or curbs as much as trying to avoid punctures. What approach do you recommend? Thank you.

  • @thegrannyringmtb1818
    @thegrannyringmtb1818 Před 2 lety +2

    Air liner is killer to fit. Managed it once. Gave up on it the second time I tried

    • @64chrisg
      @64chrisg Před 2 lety +1

      Also have airliner. Some tires easy to fit others can be a b*tch

  • @KurtRWalker
    @KurtRWalker Před měsícem

    You going to do an update of this?

  • @JaimeStLouis
    @JaimeStLouis Před 3 lety

    Was that the Tire Defender 2 or the original?

  • @24SLYRY
    @24SLYRY Před 4 lety +4

    WHAAAT ARE THOSEEE!?! 👟

  • @andycjohnston
    @andycjohnston Před 4 lety +1

    Great reviews, thanks. I've been running Tannus Armour in my 29 hardtail after seeing some reviews of people running it at the Mega avalanche. Have you tried Armour?

    • @singletrack
      @singletrack  Před 4 lety +1

      Andrew Johnston yes, the review is here, though its purpose is different to those reviewed in the video: singletrackworld.com/2019/10/review-tannus-armour-inner-tubes-aint-dead/

  • @rubenconzales9718
    @rubenconzales9718 Před 4 lety +5

    Would have been handy to state differences in weight between inserts. You refer to tyre protection; did you mean rim protection? As this is certainly more expensive than replacing tyres. I use it mainly for adding sidewall support and damping chatter. I only have experience with Rimpact (150gr) and Cushcore (250gr) per insert for 2.4 to 2.6 inch tyres. Cushcore performs better in adding sidewall support while Rimpact dampens better. Considering price and weight added, I prefer Rimpact on balance . It does however decrease trail feedback a lot and on slower trails it may “dum” it down to much.

    • @singletrack
      @singletrack  Před 4 lety +2

      ruben conzales Hi, the weights are in the full write up article - see the spreadsheet within it for full detailed info.

  • @NoFretBrettCSSMBFF
    @NoFretBrettCSSMBFF Před 2 měsíci

    Tannus Armour was *'ignored'*...?
    I applaud your (otherwise) fairly thorough review...!!!

    • @singletrack
      @singletrack  Před 2 měsíci

      It's reviewed here: singletrackworld.com/2019/10/review-tannus-armour-inner-tubes-aint-dead/

  • @klimasss71
    @klimasss71 Před 4 lety +2

    nice medieval enduro boots

  • @daveeastcott9323
    @daveeastcott9323 Před 4 lety +6

    Why no weights? That's the main concern for me. We all flip out and spend $ to remove weight from the wheels, myself in included, then flip out and spend $ to add it back so we don't destroy expensive rims!

    • @singletrack
      @singletrack  Před 4 lety +3

      Dave Eastcott Read the full round up story - there’s a spreadsheet with all that detailed info in there. singletrackworld.com/2020/03/10-tyre-inserts-tested-and-rated/

    • @daveeastcott9323
      @daveeastcott9323 Před 4 lety

      @@singletrack cool thanks

    • @mateicc
      @mateicc Před 4 lety +2

      Singletrack Magazine thanks guys but the article isn’t fully visible even after logging in

  • @MartinTeerly
    @MartinTeerly Před 4 lety +4

    nukeproof ARD rattles inside the tyre. I get my bike upside down and spin a wheel, then I hit the brake and that foam still spinning

  • @RABBlTFTW88
    @RABBlTFTW88 Před 4 lety +2

    have you tried the tannus armour?

    • @singletrack
      @singletrack  Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, it gets a mention in the linked review.

    • @RABBlTFTW88
      @RABBlTFTW88 Před 4 lety

      @@singletrack I'd love to see and updated version with more tyre inserts :)

  • @pukki34
    @pukki34 Před 4 lety +2

    Wont those huge "noodles" stop the tire from forming to the grounds and obstacles. Looks very odd to me. And they also almost completely remove the air volume inside the tires.

    • @bananasstuff3344
      @bananasstuff3344 Před 4 lety

      no they don't they allow you to run lower tyre pressures. they also compress under the weight of most fully grown humans enough to conform well to terrain. well done trying to hate something you don't understand.

  • @CYBERBUNS
    @CYBERBUNS Před 2 měsíci

    So can you give a 1-10 for each one you've tested?

  • @christopherjesusopher2711

    Do any of these do what Air-Fom brand does. With Air-Fom you do not need to inflate anything. Only insert it. Do any of the listed allow for not inflating? Air-Fom is not in America yet.

  • @gixicoN
    @gixicoN Před 3 lety

    Cushcore pros are so hard to put on 27.5s LOL

  • @dave_xc
    @dave_xc Před 2 lety

    so what insert protects the most?

  • @kramnik666
    @kramnik666 Před 4 lety +4

    Im really poor and i cant afford tobuy such things. made my own muds guards outta bottle and stuff. But! Can I make my own out of Hot water pibe isolation and have the same product? can anyone help out here?

    • @hc7185
      @hc7185 Před 4 lety

      probably worth a try :D

    • @HindsightFPV
      @HindsightFPV Před 4 lety

      You can make inserts out of this, you need to make sure it's closed cell foam or it will soak up all you sealant. You can purchase it from several places online I've ordered it from this site with no issues. www.bestmaterials.com/SearchResult.aspx?KeyWords=backer-rod-200+cc
      It comes in many different sizes depending on your tire size but 2 inch would probably work for most. If you're looking for a video of someone making them check out Children of the loam, they have a video of diy tire inserts czcams.com/video/bCfRoxOBarw/video.html

    • @kevinfrmkdz
      @kevinfrmkdz Před 4 lety

      Has to be closed cell foam, itll forsure work better than nothing

    • @Axabraxa
      @Axabraxa Před 3 lety

      Backer Rod or Pool Noodle gives a decent protection for not much money

    • @cesarayala8665
      @cesarayala8665 Před 10 měsíci

      I tried it. It didn’t work for me. Tire inserts tend to be really dense. water Pibe tends to be the opposite so it can float, it didn’t offered the same protection. Tríeme the same with other polymers but they sucked out sealant.

  • @noisiboi7308
    @noisiboi7308 Před 4 lety +7

    Give Peter Pan his boots back.

  • @jamlee344
    @jamlee344 Před 4 lety +8

    Tried the Nuke proof ARD and think it's absolutely useless. Next to no rim protection, stretches and rattles around offering less protection and not helping the bead even after being shortened.
    Invest in thicker sidewall tyres is the answer.

    • @JasonTankard
      @JasonTankard Před 4 lety

      I've used these in 2 bikes (hardtail and enduro) with muc-off sealant and they have been great for the last 8 months. Shame you didn't have the same luck.
      I recently ordered and put in cushcore in my ebike rims because I though they were the tougher more heavy duty option, though that is much different from what is said in this video. I've only just done this, so i'm still to see how it performs... will come back to this and check later and see if i need to try something different.

    • @karldavies1160
      @karldavies1160 Před 2 lety

      @@JasonTankard hi, how did you get on with the cushcore on your ebike....I'm looking at getting a set for mine but cant decide on cushcore or Rimpacts new EDH inserts!

    • @JasonTankard
      @JasonTankard Před 2 lety +2

      @@karldavies1160 I'm still with cushcore in the front on the ebike, and nukeproof in the front of the enduro, but running tubed with tannus armour in the rear. Cushcore would be fine on both, but this lets me keep using tyres that have holes, and do fast trail side repairs. Have been happy.

  • @lenbata
    @lenbata Před 3 lety +1

    Tannus Armour for the win!

  • @thecount1001
    @thecount1001 Před 3 lety +3

    are you an elf and do you live and ride in middle earth?

  • @area4race
    @area4race Před 4 lety

    i just use a pool noddle or tube isulation, because in reality they charge you up to 100 dollar for thius cheap foam

  • @lindsaymcpherson4744
    @lindsaymcpherson4744 Před 3 lety

    Why don't you just run a downhill tyre ???

  • @salvaquest2123
    @salvaquest2123 Před 2 lety +1

    🤔 🚴‍♂️ so running tubeless is supposed to all but eradicate pinch flats … and yet now the foam inserts in a tubeless set up are supposed to eradicate the pinch flats … that you are not supposed to get anyway running a tubeless set up …and of course running tubeless you run your bike with less weight … well until you install your foam inserts and carry a tube just in case all else fails …, 😂 couldn’t make it up … it’ll be back to clinchers & tubes next as the lower weight set up …. 🚴‍♂️

  • @davelloyd8454
    @davelloyd8454 Před 3 lety +1

    That's not a review. I want my 6 minutes back.