9

PRECAUTIONS AND PROCEDURES

9.1Emergency equipment and knowledge

You should never go for a bike ride without the following emergency equipment and knowledge:

Allen wrenches 4 mm., 5 mm. and 6 mm., used to tighten various clamping bolts that may loosen

Patch kit and a spare inner tube

Tyre levers

Tyre pump or cartridge inflator with correct head to fit your tyre valves

Identification (address, phone number, insurance company, emergency contact, blood type, medical allergies and conditions)

9.2Ifyougetaflattyre

aLet all the air out of the inner tube (see section 6.6.2).

Remove one side of the tyre from the rim by inserting a tyre lever in between the rim and base of the tyre’s side wall (“bead”). Pry the bead away from the rim by pushing down on the tyre lever.

Take another tyre lever and pry the bead off the rim approximately 10-15 cm. (four to six inches) away from where you started. A third lever may be needed, but at this point you should be able to begin levering the bead off the rim so that the entire circumference of one side of the tyre bead comes off the rim.

bRemove the inner tube. First remove the nut that fixes the air valve to the rim. After that, remove the valve from the rim’s valve hole, then remove the inner tube. Carefully check the outside and inside of the tyre for the cause of the puncture (thorn, glass shard, nail, etc.) and remove the object if it is still there.

If the tyre is cut, line the inside of the tyre in

the area of the cut with something that will resist the inner tube forcing its way out of the cut once inflated: a spare patch, a piece of inner tube, a bank note, an energy bar wrapper, a piece of plastic milk carton, etc.

cEither patch the tube (follow the instructions in your patch kit), or use a new inner tube. (It is always a good idea to have a patch kit as well as a new inner tube in case the old inner tube cannot be patched).

In case a new inner tube needs to be applied, the wheel needs to be disassembled.

dBefore replacing the new/repaired inner tube, put just enough air in to give it some shape.

Starting with the air valve, install the inner tube into the tyre.

Then, starting at the valve, slip the exposed tyre bead into the rim using downward pressure. Make sure the bead seats down below the valve’s thick rubber base.

Next, push the tyre’s bead down into the rim with your thumbs along either side of the circumference of the rim, not just one side. Make sure the inner tube is not being pinched by the bead. If you have trouble getting the last few cm./inches of bead over the edge of the rim with thumb pressure, use a tyre lever and be careful not to pinch the tube.

CAUTION:

Do not use a screwdriver or any tool other

than a tyre lever, as you are likely to pinch and

puncture the inner tube.

eCheck to make sure the tyre is evenly seated around both sides of the rim and that the inner tube is inside the tyre beads. Push the valve stem into the tyre to make sure that its base is seated within the tyre’s beads.

Inflate the tube slowly to the recommended

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Giant 2002 Motorized Bicycle Precautions and Procedures, Emergency equipment and knowledge, If you get a flat tyre