HaulinAshe
Well-known member
Very NO-NO on the silicone grease.
The silicone dismount story is not much to tell. I was surrounded by plenty of people, but most of them were throwing dirt on me with their rear tires since it was a race. Someone finally noticed I was missing from the ranks and came looking for me on the far side of the track. I was pinned under the bike and couldn't get out because the broken arm was what I needed to push myself off the ground.
The track was about an hour from home and I knew (unfortunately from experience) that I had roughly 45 minutes before the swelling and pain set in and the arm would be immovable. So I used my good arm to lift the elbow onto a fence post and simply set the bone with my own weight. No blood or gore, no heroism involved, nothing special about it, just knew it had to be done, so I manned-up and did it myself. The Ortho doc was all wide-eyed the next day when I told him how I set the arm. He said I did as good a job as he could have. It was a proud moment.
Once I determined what had caused such a bad spill on such a small jump, I felt very stupid. We're talking about a tubed tire coming off the rim from a minor impact with a dirt rut. That doesn't come close to comparing with the side load pressures on a tubeless street tire when the FJR is layed over and pushing through a sweeper. The thought of silicone on that tire bead scares the bejeeshus out of me!
The silicone dismount story is not much to tell. I was surrounded by plenty of people, but most of them were throwing dirt on me with their rear tires since it was a race. Someone finally noticed I was missing from the ranks and came looking for me on the far side of the track. I was pinned under the bike and couldn't get out because the broken arm was what I needed to push myself off the ground.
The track was about an hour from home and I knew (unfortunately from experience) that I had roughly 45 minutes before the swelling and pain set in and the arm would be immovable. So I used my good arm to lift the elbow onto a fence post and simply set the bone with my own weight. No blood or gore, no heroism involved, nothing special about it, just knew it had to be done, so I manned-up and did it myself. The Ortho doc was all wide-eyed the next day when I told him how I set the arm. He said I did as good a job as he could have. It was a proud moment.
Once I determined what had caused such a bad spill on such a small jump, I felt very stupid. We're talking about a tubed tire coming off the rim from a minor impact with a dirt rut. That doesn't come close to comparing with the side load pressures on a tubeless street tire when the FJR is layed over and pushing through a sweeper. The thought of silicone on that tire bead scares the bejeeshus out of me!
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