Tubeless tyre setup demystified

By Oscar Huckle

Published: Tuesday, 22 August 2023 at 14:00 PM


Tubeless tyres are rising in popularity and for good reason – they can be run safely at lower tyre pressures, which increases comfort, and forego an inner tube, relying on sealant inside to clog up any small holes.

Although tubeless setup can seem to the uninitiated like a bit of a dark art, it doesn’t need to be with the correct know-how.

In this guide, we’ll take you through a step-by-step process and explain exactly how to set up your tubeless tyres. Although we’ve demonstrated using a road bike tyre in this guide, the process is exactly the same for gravel and mountain bike tyres.

What you need for a tubeless setup

To understand how to set up your tubeless tyres, it’s first useful to explain what makes up a tubeless setup and what each component does.

Tubeless tape

Tubeless rim tape on a shop towel
Tubeless tape seals up the bed of the rim.
Kaden Gardener / Our Media

Tubeless tape is applied to the bed of a rim, providing an airtight barrier so air doesn’t escape from the spoke holes.

Tape will often be specific to road, gravel or mountain bikes and is available in different sizes to suit your rim width.

Some rims often come pre-taped and there are even some on the market, such as those from Campagnolo, which don’t require rim tape because there are aren’t any spoke holes.

Tubeless valves

Tubeless valves on a shop towel
A tubeless valve is much like a regular Presta valve. The tool on the top is for removing the valve core.
Kaden Gardener / Our Media

A tubeless valve is identical in function to a regular inner tube Presta valve. It’s usually (though not always) fitted to a conical bung that sits in the valve hole.

When the lockring is tightened down, it deforms the bung around the valve hole and tape, creating an airtight seal.

Any good tubeless valve should have a removable core. This helps with initial inflation and seating and, should the valve core become clogged up with sealant, allows you to either clean or replace this easily without having to unseat the tyre.

A valve core removal tool often comes with tubeless valves but if it doesn’t, they can be purchased separately. Alternatively, some of the best bike multi-tools incorporate this tool.

Sealant

Pirelli P-Zero sealant in front of a Cinturato Velo tyre
The sealant is designed to plug any small holes.
Kaden Gardener / Our Media

Sealant is a liquid designed to plug small holes in a tyre’s casing, usually before you’ve even noticed there’s a puncture at all. They are most commonly latex-based.

An excellent explainer on how tubeless sealant works can be found in our guide to the best tubeless sealants.

A tubeless-ready rim

Hunt Alloy SL Disc wheelset on tarmac
These Hunt Alloy SL Discs feature a 25mm rim depth.
Steve Sayers / Our Media

Like the tyre, tubeless-ready road rims are visually identical to a regular clincher rim.

However, closer inspection reveals that, like tubeless tyres, the profile of the hook of the rim (where the bead of the tyre interlocks with the rim) is subtly different. The well of the rim is often slightly deeper as well.

A select few rims – mostly from Mavic – are built to UST (Universal System Tubeless) standards. Among other things, this standard dictates the rim must be sealable without tape, with the rim bed free of holes.

These are relatively few and far between and you’re much more likely to come across a rim with a regular drilled bed.

Hooked rims have been the norm for many years, but hookless rims have proliferated on road and gravel wheels. A hookless rim has straight, vertical sides as opposed to bead hooks and they are typically only compatible with tubeless tyres.

If your rims are hookless, double-check your tyre is compatible and be sure to not exceed 73psi when inflating them because this is the ETRTO-recommended maximum pressure limit.

Tubeless tyre

Pirelli Cinturato Velo tyre
You risk blowing the tyre off the rim if it isn’t tubeless-compatible.
Kaden Gardener / Our Media

Tubeless tyres may look the same as regular clincher tyres, but they are subtly and critically different.

The two key differences are the dimensions and profile of the bead; the bead is usually very slightly smaller (or, more accurately, made to tighter tolerances) than a clincher and the profile of the bead is designed specifically to interlock with the unique hook of a tubeless rim.

It’s fairly straightforward to find out if a tyre is tubeless-compatible, because brands will often include a note on the tyre itself – tubeless tyres from WTB, for example, feature a ‘TCS’ (tubeless-compatible system) graphic.

The majority of performance mountain and gravel bike tyres are tubeless-compatible but this is not always the case on road, so pay attention to the label.

Tubeless pump (recommended but not always essential)

Bontrager tubeless pump in a workshop setting
A tubeless pump will make the job much easier.
Kaden Gardener / Our Media

In order to get some tubeless tyres to seat, they may require a sudden blast of air. Tubeless pumps incorporate an air chamber, which you pump up first and you can then discharge all of the air in the chamber into the tyre in one hit.

If you don’t have a tubeless pump, many tyres will seat with a typical track pump. If you’re having problems, you could use an air compressor, which are often found at petrol stations. Just make sure you use a Presta valve adaptor on the head of the compressor.

We’d recommend against the use of CO2 inflators because they are not always compatible with the sealant.

How to fit and set up tubeless tyres