h a l f b a k e r yWhy not imagine it in a way that works?
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Outside my workplace is a university communal bike. It has been there a long time. It has flats. No-one is fixing them. The tragedy of the commons.
I propose that communal use bikes have the tires filled with expanding foam. This foam would need to be more resilient than the stuff commonly used
for insulation, which is sort of crispy.
A tire full of foam would not go flat. The ride would not be as cushy as a pure air wheel, but the many airspaces in the foam would compress so it would not be like a wooden or sand-filled tire either.
A can of this foam could also be an emergency flat fixer for cars or bikes, though it would need to be a big can for a car. Puncture sites would be evident as the foam would extrude from them, and they could then be occluded with a thumbn until the foam set up.
corrected link air free tires
http://www.airfreet...eel-john-deere.aspx [dentworth, Jun 06 2009]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
This is baked in the form of foam tyres, but not as a foam applicator. |
|
|
You used to be able to buy this foam in a can in bikeshops in the '80s, not sure if it's still around. it was used for fixing punctures |
|
|
Was it foam or was it some gluey runny stuff that was intended to fill puncture? |
|
|
Fix a flat is mostly gas, with some runny stuff to fill the puncture from the inside. |
|
|
The foam sealant for remodeling that I have seen is too brittle for this use. I am hopeful that there might be a more plastic foam sealant that I could press into service for this poor bike parked outside. I was thinking I would just cut the fill valves off and fill thru those holes. We will have the bike sign an informed consent first, of course. |
|
|
Yeah it was foam in a compressed air canister. you just attached it to the valve to reinflate and seal the tyre. |
|
|
I like the Nerf ring but you would have to butterfly the tire in half to get it in there. I suppose you could just glue the tire to the ring and hope for the best. |
|
|
Foam tires have been available at various points, and I guess
still are. For communal bikes they might be a valid solution.
The real problem is the increased risk of damage to both the
wheel and the rider. A pneumatic tire has the entire
diameter of the tire to distribute impacts, a foam tire can
only do it over the immediate contact area. This provides a
much rougher ride, and a greatly increased chance of spoke
breakage. |
|
|
"I am hopeful that there might be a more plastic foam sealant ..." |
|
|
fess up, what you really want is custard- UK version |
|
|
If you are using foam from a pressurized can to inflate a tire, will this repressuization tire not turn your foam back to goo? |
|
|
Where I come from, the term "communal bike" has an entirely different meaning. |
|
|
[2Fries] Most expanding foams are a two part reacting
material, they won't reverse under pressure. |
|
|
Those buggars lied to me when I wanted to fix a leaky Zodiak by making it a solid foam boat then! Perfectly good bullet proof boat and I let it go for a song. <mutters under breath> |
|
|
I think what you need is liquid nerf foam. They have to have a way to inject it into the molds they use. It might be a hot liquid though, which would make portability a problem. Perhaps you could suggest this product line to the Nerf company. |
|
| |