Any interest in sprint wheels for tubs?

Tubs are superb: they ride so well; but there is a vast difference between cheap ones and good ones.

I’m running Vittoria Pave, and have been for a few years (not huge mileages). One of them punctured. Using the internet, I made an incision, found the hole in the tube, patched it and sewed it up. It’s a latex tube. It loses air a bit quicker than its partner, but is good for a couple of rides. I know, “Bullshit” you cry, and I don’t blame you. But it is possible and one day I will do a forensic YouTube “tubopsy” to prove it!

Anyway, the bigger problem is prolly the lack of availability of more tubs rather than repair skills.
Nothing like a pair of Clement seats. If my method works I’ll be buying up all the old knackered ones I can find and put new lates tubes in them!!
 
Yes Deffo worth the effort (incidentally, I read somewhere that a certain Tom Ritchey supported his fledgling frame building ambitions by repairing tubs - back when there must have been good demand).
 
Yes, I bagged a couple of Corsas from Condor when you outed them a while back (thanks!). But the bargains sell out leaving Rally’s which I can’t get on with (ok spare under the saddle). A good range at Bikeinn still though.
 
Just got hold of a couple of Clement yellow label Setas. One doesn’t hold air and doesn’t even pump up to try and find a hole. As they are NOS I guess the tube has just perished.

Has anyone ever replaced the whole tube by the following method-

Remove base tape and h snip the stitching for 3 inches past the valve hole. Pull out the tube from casing and cut it clean through. Attach strong cord to the cut end. Pull the cut tube out whilst pulling the cord through the casing.

Take a new latex tube and cut the same way as above, and attach the cord. Cover in talc and use cord to pull new tube into carcass. Overlap the ends by at least an inch and splice the tube using a latex bonding solution, such as bostik 3851. Allow to cure, lightly inflate and check for leaks at the splice. Restitch the small segment of cut stitch and reapply the base tape with copydex.

Sound feasible??
Yes, done it once with a latex tube, there’s a certain way to do the overlap. It was for a cross tub so low pressure. It worked. I still do a few tub repairs but it’s more of a challenge as it’s not really economically viable and if sealant is used it’s usually a non starter
 
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