Should I replace my bicycle tires if they have not been inflated in multiple yearsWhen should you replace tires after getting a flat?Correct inflation pressure for old road bikeTire slips off the rim when inflated to 8barWhen not in use, How should I store my tubeless tires?Does the value of an old bicycle depreciate if old tires replace with new ones?Alternative options for Trek FX 7.1 brakesChain Slippage on MTBMystery flat keeps happening 3-5 times a week. Do I weigh too much for my tires?flat tyre even after replacing the tube?Why did both of my inner tubes blow out on a new bike I've only put 4 hours on?

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Should I replace my bicycle tires if they have not been inflated in multiple years


When should you replace tires after getting a flat?Correct inflation pressure for old road bikeTire slips off the rim when inflated to 8barWhen not in use, How should I store my tubeless tires?Does the value of an old bicycle depreciate if old tires replace with new ones?Alternative options for Trek FX 7.1 brakesChain Slippage on MTBMystery flat keeps happening 3-5 times a week. Do I weigh too much for my tires?flat tyre even after replacing the tube?Why did both of my inner tubes blow out on a new bike I've only put 4 hours on?













12















A little over 5 years ago I bought a Magna bicycle. Within the first summer of riding it the rear brake fell apart. I finally got around to having he brake fixed this past month but I am worried about the quality of the tires as the bike (which has been hanging in my un-insulated garage for 5 years with many cold winters) has not had the tires inflated in 5 years. I recently checked the PSI on the tires with my gauge and it is 2 PSI. I'm wondering if I should get the tires replaced. I haven't tried putting any air into them as I don't want the tires to pop. Any help is appreciated.










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    Apr 30 at 22:18







  • 4





    If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

    – Criggie
    May 1 at 1:09















12















A little over 5 years ago I bought a Magna bicycle. Within the first summer of riding it the rear brake fell apart. I finally got around to having he brake fixed this past month but I am worried about the quality of the tires as the bike (which has been hanging in my un-insulated garage for 5 years with many cold winters) has not had the tires inflated in 5 years. I recently checked the PSI on the tires with my gauge and it is 2 PSI. I'm wondering if I should get the tires replaced. I haven't tried putting any air into them as I don't want the tires to pop. Any help is appreciated.










share|improve this question

















  • 4





    Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    Apr 30 at 22:18







  • 4





    If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

    – Criggie
    May 1 at 1:09













12












12








12


3






A little over 5 years ago I bought a Magna bicycle. Within the first summer of riding it the rear brake fell apart. I finally got around to having he brake fixed this past month but I am worried about the quality of the tires as the bike (which has been hanging in my un-insulated garage for 5 years with many cold winters) has not had the tires inflated in 5 years. I recently checked the PSI on the tires with my gauge and it is 2 PSI. I'm wondering if I should get the tires replaced. I haven't tried putting any air into them as I don't want the tires to pop. Any help is appreciated.










share|improve this question














A little over 5 years ago I bought a Magna bicycle. Within the first summer of riding it the rear brake fell apart. I finally got around to having he brake fixed this past month but I am worried about the quality of the tires as the bike (which has been hanging in my un-insulated garage for 5 years with many cold winters) has not had the tires inflated in 5 years. I recently checked the PSI on the tires with my gauge and it is 2 PSI. I'm wondering if I should get the tires replaced. I haven't tried putting any air into them as I don't want the tires to pop. Any help is appreciated.







mountain-bike tire repair replacement






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 30 at 14:33









Ai_OBAi_OB

6316




6316







  • 4





    Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    Apr 30 at 22:18







  • 4





    If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

    – Criggie
    May 1 at 1:09












  • 4





    Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    Apr 30 at 22:18







  • 4





    If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

    – Criggie
    May 1 at 1:09







4




4





Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

– Daniel R Hicks
Apr 30 at 22:18






Five years is not that old for decent bike tires. So long as they weren't sitting flat on the floor for an extended period and weren't exposed to strong petroleum fumes they should be OK.

– Daniel R Hicks
Apr 30 at 22:18





4




4





If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

– Criggie
May 1 at 1:09





If you're just tootling about your driveway then there's not far to go if you have a flat. Which is a different matter from being miles from anywhere, or a blowout while rolling fast. Where are you intending to ride this bike ?

– Criggie
May 1 at 1:09










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















22














If the bike has been hanging rather than sitting with weight on the tyres (and hence damaging the sidewalls), there is a good chance the tyres are still ok.



You can check the tyres by going around and looking for hairline cracks in the rubber and feeling if the rubber is brittle/flaky.



If they look ok then go ahead and inflate them and recheck the following day. If they still show no obvious signs of damage then I would go ahead and ride them.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

    – Ai_OB
    Apr 30 at 14:50







  • 3





    Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

    – Andy P
    Apr 30 at 14:55






  • 6





    The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

    – Argenti Apparatus
    Apr 30 at 16:17






  • 5





    Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

    – cmaster
    Apr 30 at 17:02






  • 1





    At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

    – dwizum
    May 1 at 13:20


















9














There are ways tires get damaged other than by having weight on them. For example, ozone and ultraviolet light can cause dry rot.



If the tires were stored in a cool area, out of sunlight, and not near any electrical equipment, they're likely fine.



If, however, they display cracks, or are brittle, or were stored in sunlight or near electrical equipment, I'd recommend replacing them along with your tubes.






share|improve this answer






























    9














    I agree with Andy P. If the tires are hanging, then I would check the side walls for cracks. If all is good, then I would inflate to see what happens! If they do take air I would get new tubes before taking the bike out of walking distance, because I do not trust old tubes.






    share|improve this answer
































      5














      I assume it's very unlikely that a tire gets damaged because of not being inflated. I would be more worried about how brittle and hard the rubber got during the years. Some tires are more - some less affected by this. Especially when you are planing to ride also in the wet a front tire with hard and brittle rubber can be a serious safety issue.






      share|improve this answer






























        4














        In my experience, it is not the winter that ruins tires but rather the harsh summers. Heat causes the tires to expand. Although vinyl is elastic, it has certain limits.



        I would say ride for about a mile. Check the tire afterwards because some cracks are insignificant and were probably going to develop either way. Other cracks do not last long.



        I received a bike with cracked tires one and I had the same question but it lasted me several months.



        There are two important parts to a tire, the tread and the inner tire. When tires are no good,the inner tire is typically fibrous and falls apart. Tires are not good when the tread is depleted. Only way to figure any of this out is to actually strain the tires and go from there.



        I would inspect the tire tread and inner tire before riding and then after riding. When the inner tire fibers have come loose, the tread will wear out easily despite excellent tread. This is because the fibers hold the tread in place while riding and prevent significant deformations.



        I would even go as far as saying the inner tire is more important than the tread here because tires with excellent tread will still deform when riding if the inner tire has loose fibers. Also, loose fibers will cause the tread to rip. Cracks tend to occur in tires simply because of the constant deformation that tires go through and then weather imbalances the chemicals inside of it. So it is possible that the tire has cracks but the fibers still hold up.



        Thicker tires such as those on mountain bikes and the like will often have cracks but still be good. With road bike tires, cracks tend to be more common with loose fibers. So if a road bike, these cracks have a higher chance of loose fibers than does a mountain bike. Mountain bike tire have very strong inner tire fibers. You might not even notice the fibers because they may be covered in any bike or they might be uncovered.



        But like I said, ride the bike and take notice of any changes. If fibers cannot be observed, try deforming tire by folding it around the cracks and fold it at other locations where there are no cracks. Two things should happen. Cracks shouldn't form where they weren't, and cracks shouldn't worsen where they are.






        share|improve this answer

























        • Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

          – Swifty
          May 1 at 5:05











        • I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

          – ojs
          May 2 at 4:56



















        0














        Tires should be ok, just ck for cracks as said above.
        Use the airchuck.
        Remove the wheel.
        Inflate to about 5 psi so you can squeeze with your hand.

        Check that the tire bead is set around the whole rim, and spaced fairly evenly.
        Inflate to 15 psi
        Roll the tire on floor and ck bead again.
        Inflate to at least 20-25 psi



        For hybrid tires 35-45psi
        Road tires 80-120
        Hope this helps :)






        share|improve this answer























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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes








          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          22














          If the bike has been hanging rather than sitting with weight on the tyres (and hence damaging the sidewalls), there is a good chance the tyres are still ok.



          You can check the tyres by going around and looking for hairline cracks in the rubber and feeling if the rubber is brittle/flaky.



          If they look ok then go ahead and inflate them and recheck the following day. If they still show no obvious signs of damage then I would go ahead and ride them.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

            – Ai_OB
            Apr 30 at 14:50







          • 3





            Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

            – Andy P
            Apr 30 at 14:55






          • 6





            The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

            – Argenti Apparatus
            Apr 30 at 16:17






          • 5





            Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

            – cmaster
            Apr 30 at 17:02






          • 1





            At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

            – dwizum
            May 1 at 13:20















          22














          If the bike has been hanging rather than sitting with weight on the tyres (and hence damaging the sidewalls), there is a good chance the tyres are still ok.



          You can check the tyres by going around and looking for hairline cracks in the rubber and feeling if the rubber is brittle/flaky.



          If they look ok then go ahead and inflate them and recheck the following day. If they still show no obvious signs of damage then I would go ahead and ride them.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

            – Ai_OB
            Apr 30 at 14:50







          • 3





            Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

            – Andy P
            Apr 30 at 14:55






          • 6





            The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

            – Argenti Apparatus
            Apr 30 at 16:17






          • 5





            Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

            – cmaster
            Apr 30 at 17:02






          • 1





            At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

            – dwizum
            May 1 at 13:20













          22












          22








          22







          If the bike has been hanging rather than sitting with weight on the tyres (and hence damaging the sidewalls), there is a good chance the tyres are still ok.



          You can check the tyres by going around and looking for hairline cracks in the rubber and feeling if the rubber is brittle/flaky.



          If they look ok then go ahead and inflate them and recheck the following day. If they still show no obvious signs of damage then I would go ahead and ride them.






          share|improve this answer













          If the bike has been hanging rather than sitting with weight on the tyres (and hence damaging the sidewalls), there is a good chance the tyres are still ok.



          You can check the tyres by going around and looking for hairline cracks in the rubber and feeling if the rubber is brittle/flaky.



          If they look ok then go ahead and inflate them and recheck the following day. If they still show no obvious signs of damage then I would go ahead and ride them.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Apr 30 at 14:38









          Andy PAndy P

          4,8221120




          4,8221120







          • 1





            -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

            – Ai_OB
            Apr 30 at 14:50







          • 3





            Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

            – Andy P
            Apr 30 at 14:55






          • 6





            The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

            – Argenti Apparatus
            Apr 30 at 16:17






          • 5





            Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

            – cmaster
            Apr 30 at 17:02






          • 1





            At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

            – dwizum
            May 1 at 13:20












          • 1





            -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

            – Ai_OB
            Apr 30 at 14:50







          • 3





            Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

            – Andy P
            Apr 30 at 14:55






          • 6





            The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

            – Argenti Apparatus
            Apr 30 at 16:17






          • 5





            Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

            – cmaster
            Apr 30 at 17:02






          • 1





            At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

            – dwizum
            May 1 at 13:20







          1




          1





          -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

          – Ai_OB
          Apr 30 at 14:50






          -Would you recommend using a manual pump over an air compressor? I'm assuming I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?

          – Ai_OB
          Apr 30 at 14:50





          3




          3





          Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

          – Andy P
          Apr 30 at 14:55





          Manual pump vs compressor doesn't really matter - if anything I find compressors inflate slightly slower than by hand. Unless you are very heavy its actually rare to want to inflate a tyre to its maximum rating, modern trends are towards lower pressures.

          – Andy P
          Apr 30 at 14:55




          6




          6





          The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

          – Argenti Apparatus
          Apr 30 at 16:17





          The tires won't blow up - the carcass that gives the tire strength will not have substantially degraded. The rubber does degrade however so the worry is fast wear and decreased grip. The tubes may have degraded also. If you inflate them them may rupture. If they do just replace them.

          – Argenti Apparatus
          Apr 30 at 16:17




          5




          5





          Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

          – cmaster
          Apr 30 at 17:02





          Also: I'd be much more worried about a garage in blazing sunlight during hot summers than about cold winters. Five years is about as long as as tire rubber stays good if it's not heat treated too much. So the tires may still be fine, but they likely won't stay fine for long.

          – cmaster
          Apr 30 at 17:02




          1




          1





          At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

          – dwizum
          May 1 at 13:20





          At the risk of getting a little sidetracked, I wanted to respond to where @Ai_OB commented: "I shouldn't inflate the tires to maximum PSI on the first day and if all is good the second day and the tires are holding the air I can inflate to maximum?" Depending on where/how you're riding, you may never want to inflate to the maximum on the sidewall - it's literally just the maximum and is probably too high for many people/bikes/rides. Here's a good guide: bicycling.com/repair/a20004232/…

          – dwizum
          May 1 at 13:20











          9














          There are ways tires get damaged other than by having weight on them. For example, ozone and ultraviolet light can cause dry rot.



          If the tires were stored in a cool area, out of sunlight, and not near any electrical equipment, they're likely fine.



          If, however, they display cracks, or are brittle, or were stored in sunlight or near electrical equipment, I'd recommend replacing them along with your tubes.






          share|improve this answer



























            9














            There are ways tires get damaged other than by having weight on them. For example, ozone and ultraviolet light can cause dry rot.



            If the tires were stored in a cool area, out of sunlight, and not near any electrical equipment, they're likely fine.



            If, however, they display cracks, or are brittle, or were stored in sunlight or near electrical equipment, I'd recommend replacing them along with your tubes.






            share|improve this answer

























              9












              9








              9







              There are ways tires get damaged other than by having weight on them. For example, ozone and ultraviolet light can cause dry rot.



              If the tires were stored in a cool area, out of sunlight, and not near any electrical equipment, they're likely fine.



              If, however, they display cracks, or are brittle, or were stored in sunlight or near electrical equipment, I'd recommend replacing them along with your tubes.






              share|improve this answer













              There are ways tires get damaged other than by having weight on them. For example, ozone and ultraviolet light can cause dry rot.



              If the tires were stored in a cool area, out of sunlight, and not near any electrical equipment, they're likely fine.



              If, however, they display cracks, or are brittle, or were stored in sunlight or near electrical equipment, I'd recommend replacing them along with your tubes.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Apr 30 at 20:31









              Andrew HenleAndrew Henle

              2,958814




              2,958814





















                  9














                  I agree with Andy P. If the tires are hanging, then I would check the side walls for cracks. If all is good, then I would inflate to see what happens! If they do take air I would get new tubes before taking the bike out of walking distance, because I do not trust old tubes.






                  share|improve this answer





























                    9














                    I agree with Andy P. If the tires are hanging, then I would check the side walls for cracks. If all is good, then I would inflate to see what happens! If they do take air I would get new tubes before taking the bike out of walking distance, because I do not trust old tubes.






                    share|improve this answer



























                      9












                      9








                      9







                      I agree with Andy P. If the tires are hanging, then I would check the side walls for cracks. If all is good, then I would inflate to see what happens! If they do take air I would get new tubes before taking the bike out of walking distance, because I do not trust old tubes.






                      share|improve this answer















                      I agree with Andy P. If the tires are hanging, then I would check the side walls for cracks. If all is good, then I would inflate to see what happens! If they do take air I would get new tubes before taking the bike out of walking distance, because I do not trust old tubes.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited May 2 at 4:39









                      RockPaperLizard

                      1034




                      1034










                      answered Apr 30 at 14:45









                      BrianNBrianN

                      1035




                      1035





















                          5














                          I assume it's very unlikely that a tire gets damaged because of not being inflated. I would be more worried about how brittle and hard the rubber got during the years. Some tires are more - some less affected by this. Especially when you are planing to ride also in the wet a front tire with hard and brittle rubber can be a serious safety issue.






                          share|improve this answer



























                            5














                            I assume it's very unlikely that a tire gets damaged because of not being inflated. I would be more worried about how brittle and hard the rubber got during the years. Some tires are more - some less affected by this. Especially when you are planing to ride also in the wet a front tire with hard and brittle rubber can be a serious safety issue.






                            share|improve this answer

























                              5












                              5








                              5







                              I assume it's very unlikely that a tire gets damaged because of not being inflated. I would be more worried about how brittle and hard the rubber got during the years. Some tires are more - some less affected by this. Especially when you are planing to ride also in the wet a front tire with hard and brittle rubber can be a serious safety issue.






                              share|improve this answer













                              I assume it's very unlikely that a tire gets damaged because of not being inflated. I would be more worried about how brittle and hard the rubber got during the years. Some tires are more - some less affected by this. Especially when you are planing to ride also in the wet a front tire with hard and brittle rubber can be a serious safety issue.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Apr 30 at 15:01









                              nooxnoox

                              21112




                              21112





















                                  4














                                  In my experience, it is not the winter that ruins tires but rather the harsh summers. Heat causes the tires to expand. Although vinyl is elastic, it has certain limits.



                                  I would say ride for about a mile. Check the tire afterwards because some cracks are insignificant and were probably going to develop either way. Other cracks do not last long.



                                  I received a bike with cracked tires one and I had the same question but it lasted me several months.



                                  There are two important parts to a tire, the tread and the inner tire. When tires are no good,the inner tire is typically fibrous and falls apart. Tires are not good when the tread is depleted. Only way to figure any of this out is to actually strain the tires and go from there.



                                  I would inspect the tire tread and inner tire before riding and then after riding. When the inner tire fibers have come loose, the tread will wear out easily despite excellent tread. This is because the fibers hold the tread in place while riding and prevent significant deformations.



                                  I would even go as far as saying the inner tire is more important than the tread here because tires with excellent tread will still deform when riding if the inner tire has loose fibers. Also, loose fibers will cause the tread to rip. Cracks tend to occur in tires simply because of the constant deformation that tires go through and then weather imbalances the chemicals inside of it. So it is possible that the tire has cracks but the fibers still hold up.



                                  Thicker tires such as those on mountain bikes and the like will often have cracks but still be good. With road bike tires, cracks tend to be more common with loose fibers. So if a road bike, these cracks have a higher chance of loose fibers than does a mountain bike. Mountain bike tire have very strong inner tire fibers. You might not even notice the fibers because they may be covered in any bike or they might be uncovered.



                                  But like I said, ride the bike and take notice of any changes. If fibers cannot be observed, try deforming tire by folding it around the cracks and fold it at other locations where there are no cracks. Two things should happen. Cracks shouldn't form where they weren't, and cracks shouldn't worsen where they are.






                                  share|improve this answer

























                                  • Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                    – Swifty
                                    May 1 at 5:05











                                  • I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                    – ojs
                                    May 2 at 4:56
















                                  4














                                  In my experience, it is not the winter that ruins tires but rather the harsh summers. Heat causes the tires to expand. Although vinyl is elastic, it has certain limits.



                                  I would say ride for about a mile. Check the tire afterwards because some cracks are insignificant and were probably going to develop either way. Other cracks do not last long.



                                  I received a bike with cracked tires one and I had the same question but it lasted me several months.



                                  There are two important parts to a tire, the tread and the inner tire. When tires are no good,the inner tire is typically fibrous and falls apart. Tires are not good when the tread is depleted. Only way to figure any of this out is to actually strain the tires and go from there.



                                  I would inspect the tire tread and inner tire before riding and then after riding. When the inner tire fibers have come loose, the tread will wear out easily despite excellent tread. This is because the fibers hold the tread in place while riding and prevent significant deformations.



                                  I would even go as far as saying the inner tire is more important than the tread here because tires with excellent tread will still deform when riding if the inner tire has loose fibers. Also, loose fibers will cause the tread to rip. Cracks tend to occur in tires simply because of the constant deformation that tires go through and then weather imbalances the chemicals inside of it. So it is possible that the tire has cracks but the fibers still hold up.



                                  Thicker tires such as those on mountain bikes and the like will often have cracks but still be good. With road bike tires, cracks tend to be more common with loose fibers. So if a road bike, these cracks have a higher chance of loose fibers than does a mountain bike. Mountain bike tire have very strong inner tire fibers. You might not even notice the fibers because they may be covered in any bike or they might be uncovered.



                                  But like I said, ride the bike and take notice of any changes. If fibers cannot be observed, try deforming tire by folding it around the cracks and fold it at other locations where there are no cracks. Two things should happen. Cracks shouldn't form where they weren't, and cracks shouldn't worsen where they are.






                                  share|improve this answer

























                                  • Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                    – Swifty
                                    May 1 at 5:05











                                  • I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                    – ojs
                                    May 2 at 4:56














                                  4












                                  4








                                  4







                                  In my experience, it is not the winter that ruins tires but rather the harsh summers. Heat causes the tires to expand. Although vinyl is elastic, it has certain limits.



                                  I would say ride for about a mile. Check the tire afterwards because some cracks are insignificant and were probably going to develop either way. Other cracks do not last long.



                                  I received a bike with cracked tires one and I had the same question but it lasted me several months.



                                  There are two important parts to a tire, the tread and the inner tire. When tires are no good,the inner tire is typically fibrous and falls apart. Tires are not good when the tread is depleted. Only way to figure any of this out is to actually strain the tires and go from there.



                                  I would inspect the tire tread and inner tire before riding and then after riding. When the inner tire fibers have come loose, the tread will wear out easily despite excellent tread. This is because the fibers hold the tread in place while riding and prevent significant deformations.



                                  I would even go as far as saying the inner tire is more important than the tread here because tires with excellent tread will still deform when riding if the inner tire has loose fibers. Also, loose fibers will cause the tread to rip. Cracks tend to occur in tires simply because of the constant deformation that tires go through and then weather imbalances the chemicals inside of it. So it is possible that the tire has cracks but the fibers still hold up.



                                  Thicker tires such as those on mountain bikes and the like will often have cracks but still be good. With road bike tires, cracks tend to be more common with loose fibers. So if a road bike, these cracks have a higher chance of loose fibers than does a mountain bike. Mountain bike tire have very strong inner tire fibers. You might not even notice the fibers because they may be covered in any bike or they might be uncovered.



                                  But like I said, ride the bike and take notice of any changes. If fibers cannot be observed, try deforming tire by folding it around the cracks and fold it at other locations where there are no cracks. Two things should happen. Cracks shouldn't form where they weren't, and cracks shouldn't worsen where they are.






                                  share|improve this answer















                                  In my experience, it is not the winter that ruins tires but rather the harsh summers. Heat causes the tires to expand. Although vinyl is elastic, it has certain limits.



                                  I would say ride for about a mile. Check the tire afterwards because some cracks are insignificant and were probably going to develop either way. Other cracks do not last long.



                                  I received a bike with cracked tires one and I had the same question but it lasted me several months.



                                  There are two important parts to a tire, the tread and the inner tire. When tires are no good,the inner tire is typically fibrous and falls apart. Tires are not good when the tread is depleted. Only way to figure any of this out is to actually strain the tires and go from there.



                                  I would inspect the tire tread and inner tire before riding and then after riding. When the inner tire fibers have come loose, the tread will wear out easily despite excellent tread. This is because the fibers hold the tread in place while riding and prevent significant deformations.



                                  I would even go as far as saying the inner tire is more important than the tread here because tires with excellent tread will still deform when riding if the inner tire has loose fibers. Also, loose fibers will cause the tread to rip. Cracks tend to occur in tires simply because of the constant deformation that tires go through and then weather imbalances the chemicals inside of it. So it is possible that the tire has cracks but the fibers still hold up.



                                  Thicker tires such as those on mountain bikes and the like will often have cracks but still be good. With road bike tires, cracks tend to be more common with loose fibers. So if a road bike, these cracks have a higher chance of loose fibers than does a mountain bike. Mountain bike tire have very strong inner tire fibers. You might not even notice the fibers because they may be covered in any bike or they might be uncovered.



                                  But like I said, ride the bike and take notice of any changes. If fibers cannot be observed, try deforming tire by folding it around the cracks and fold it at other locations where there are no cracks. Two things should happen. Cracks shouldn't form where they weren't, and cracks shouldn't worsen where they are.







                                  share|improve this answer














                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer








                                  edited May 1 at 5:10









                                  Criggie

                                  46.3k578158




                                  46.3k578158










                                  answered May 1 at 3:33









                                  Jonathan AguileraJonathan Aguilera

                                  411




                                  411












                                  • Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                    – Swifty
                                    May 1 at 5:05











                                  • I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                    – ojs
                                    May 2 at 4:56


















                                  • Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                    – Swifty
                                    May 1 at 5:05











                                  • I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                    – ojs
                                    May 2 at 4:56

















                                  Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                  – Swifty
                                  May 1 at 5:05





                                  Welcome! Don’t forget to take the tour. If you break things down into more paragraphs that would help the readability.

                                  – Swifty
                                  May 1 at 5:05













                                  I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                  – ojs
                                  May 2 at 4:56






                                  I'd like to know more about the fibers and vinyl

                                  – ojs
                                  May 2 at 4:56












                                  0














                                  Tires should be ok, just ck for cracks as said above.
                                  Use the airchuck.
                                  Remove the wheel.
                                  Inflate to about 5 psi so you can squeeze with your hand.

                                  Check that the tire bead is set around the whole rim, and spaced fairly evenly.
                                  Inflate to 15 psi
                                  Roll the tire on floor and ck bead again.
                                  Inflate to at least 20-25 psi



                                  For hybrid tires 35-45psi
                                  Road tires 80-120
                                  Hope this helps :)






                                  share|improve this answer



























                                    0














                                    Tires should be ok, just ck for cracks as said above.
                                    Use the airchuck.
                                    Remove the wheel.
                                    Inflate to about 5 psi so you can squeeze with your hand.

                                    Check that the tire bead is set around the whole rim, and spaced fairly evenly.
                                    Inflate to 15 psi
                                    Roll the tire on floor and ck bead again.
                                    Inflate to at least 20-25 psi



                                    For hybrid tires 35-45psi
                                    Road tires 80-120
                                    Hope this helps :)






                                    share|improve this answer

























                                      0












                                      0








                                      0







                                      Tires should be ok, just ck for cracks as said above.
                                      Use the airchuck.
                                      Remove the wheel.
                                      Inflate to about 5 psi so you can squeeze with your hand.

                                      Check that the tire bead is set around the whole rim, and spaced fairly evenly.
                                      Inflate to 15 psi
                                      Roll the tire on floor and ck bead again.
                                      Inflate to at least 20-25 psi



                                      For hybrid tires 35-45psi
                                      Road tires 80-120
                                      Hope this helps :)






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      Tires should be ok, just ck for cracks as said above.
                                      Use the airchuck.
                                      Remove the wheel.
                                      Inflate to about 5 psi so you can squeeze with your hand.

                                      Check that the tire bead is set around the whole rim, and spaced fairly evenly.
                                      Inflate to 15 psi
                                      Roll the tire on floor and ck bead again.
                                      Inflate to at least 20-25 psi



                                      For hybrid tires 35-45psi
                                      Road tires 80-120
                                      Hope this helps :)







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered May 2 at 12:14









                                      HackSwiTcHHackSwiTcH

                                      1




                                      1



























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