Bicycles Asked by Wojna on August 4, 2021
I need to replace 2 inner tubes on my bike. The tire sidewall indicates (54-559) 26×2 but the rim says 26×1.5/1.75. The inner tube i took out have no dimensions shown on them unlike other ones I’ve done. What inner tube size should I replace it with 2, 1.75 or 1.5 or other?
Thanks in advance.
We get a lot of questions about tube and tyre size names because they're confusing.
In your case the tyre and therefore the wheel are both a ISO or ETRTO size of 559mm across, and the tyre has a width of 54mm, or around 2 inches. Your rim suggests that the tyre should be 1.5 to 1.75 inches in width.
Therefore someone has put a slightly wider tyre on in the past. As long as its not rubbing on the frame or the brakes, you're okay with a 2 inch tyre.
Since you have a 2 inch/54mm tyre, your tubes should be sized for that dimension. So you need a tube that covers the 54mm width of a 559mm tyre (aka a common 26" tyre)
Since you already have a 1.75" tube, it would probably work fine. Butyl rubber stretches nicely, and the only downside is a slightly elevated risk of puncturing, while being a little lighter.
Your third option is to simply patch the existing inner tubes and refit them, presuming they've got holes and no longer hold air. Not a big deal, and cheaper than new tubes every time you get a flat.
Answered by Criggie on August 4, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP