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Also consider using cut-up old tube as a liner.
The new spoons I bought for my trail kit help with this as they have a little nub near the end of the spoon. This helps you position the spoon right on the edge of the wheel and helps prevent pinching the tube. Quite nice.
+1, i do both... lots of baby powder on a slightly inflated tube + WD or Windex once i'm getting the last bits on. usually have to reseat the bead with some WD as well. deflate, spray bitch spot, inflate to like 40+psi, let sit until it seats.
if you're fighting, you're prob biting too much. small nips with 3 spoons.
could also invest in one of these, Baja No Pinch Tool
Beta 200RR
I want that Baja tool...
In the mean time, if you haven't bought a gallon of Napa Ru-Glyde tire lube, get some. It makes Windex, WD40, talk, that jar from your mother's dresser, etc all seem like tacky glue in comparison.
Not that much more $$ and you could probably find a used manual machine which would make it even easier.
-Christian LRRS/CCS HasBeen ECK Racing
2011 Pit Bike Race CHAMPION!
Bump... If I'm only going to have one set of irons, are the motion pro combo lever/wrench ones the right choice? The KDX rear axle is 22mm and the nut on the other side is 27mm. Should I get both of those? Or just one for the axle, plus the 10/12mm combo for the second one?
Always buy all the tools. All of them.
-Christian LRRS/CCS HasBeen ECK Racing
2011 Pit Bike Race CHAMPION!
The motion pro "T-6" levers are fucking awesome. They have this tiny little nipple on the end of the spoon that makes putting the tire on without pinching the tube easy. I'd lean towards getting the whatever size the nut on your axle is and either using channel locks, an adjustable wrench or a right-sized socket on the axle itself, if required. None of my machines usually require anything; the nut usually gives way without anything on the axle itself. Usually.
The smaller combo spoon should be good for removing rimlocks and valve stems.
I'd recommend buying a 2nd set of larger spoons for use @ home. Keep the combo set in your oh-shit-kit and the bigger spoons at home.
I like the big curved lever MP sells. I think I got it in another kit with two smaller levers too. I think I use 4-5 levers at a time putting tires on 9/10 times @ home.
So yeah, all the tools.
Yup. That little MP aluminum spoon/wrench it the ticket... Makes it so easy... I honestly think a caveman could do it.
LRRS/CCS Expert #820 / RSP Racing / Woodcraft / MTAG Pirelli / Dyno Solutions / Tony's Track Days / Sport Bike Track Gear / GMD Computrack /