The legendary combination of durability, protection, and run-flat performance of Vittoria Air-Liners, made for your favorite tubeless-ready road tires!
The Vittoria Air-Liner system provides unmatched bump compliance and impact protection while ensuring bead lock at lower pressures. In the event of air loss, the Vittoria Air-Liner Road system is designed for run-flat use. The insert increases the safety of your tubeless set-up by keeping the tire in place even in case of puncture - No risk to ride on the wheels!
The Vittoria Air-Liner Road system is compatible with all tubeless road tires on the market. The lightweight material absorbs no sealant, while the proprietary Vittoria tubeless valves eliminate valve clogging. Whether you are training, touring, exploring, or racing, the Vittoria Air-Liner Road system will provide peace of mind and protection for the ride ahead.
Available in 3 sizes to fit most standard road tires from 700 x 23mm to 700 x 32mm.
The kit contains two Air-Liner Road inserts, one Universal Tubeless Tire Sealant bottle and the Road Tubeless Tool-kit - pliers and clips for easy tubeless tire removal.
B-Stock - This product has one or more B-Stock units available. These units can be purchased at a discount (see option select). B-Stock units were returned from other customers and may have missing or damaged packaging materials. These units are otherwise as new. The full manufacturer warranty applies. Click Here for more information.
Small - 23/26mm Tire | Mfg PartNum: 11P00048 |
Medium - 27/29mm Tire | Mfg PartNum: 11P00049 |
Large - 30/32mm Tire | Mfg PartNum: 11P00050 |
Full Disclosure, I am a former professional bicycle mechanic. During peak season in Northern California where people run over "goat head" thorns, it's not uncommon for me to have changed 20 sets (i.e. 40) of tires in a given 8 hour shift--5 days a week for the 2-3 months of the year. It's fair to say I've changed more than my fair share of tires.
I would venture to guess that the people that complain or comment about the difficulty to install tire may not know about tire/wheel geometry in general--the central channel in the wheel is many millimeters, as much as 20-30mm in some cases SMALLER than the bead diameter of the tire designed to install on the wheel. The "trick" is to drive both sides of the bead toward the central channel of the wheel and you will virtually need no tools for any tire install.
On DT Swiss wheels, I was able to install these with the given tools, but I've had certain wheel/tire combinations that were WAY more difficult to install than this (e.g. WTB mtb wheels to WTB mtb tires) without the insert.
In terms of performance, I've run 33mm cyclocross tires with these down to 25 psi and while I previously would have bottomed out the rim 3-4x a lap and could feel the abrupt "clunk" of the wheel to the root or obstacle, I can run the same pressure and only clunk the wheel on a badly mis-timed bunnyhop over a curb or barrier.
This is a great idea but absolutely imposwsible to install - trying to out on a Vittoria Corsa Pro and I have shattered 3 three of the anti-slip tools, the provided tire iron installer tool, and a Pedro's platic tire iron, I still don't have the tire on and I'm unsure if I can ever get it on. This is impossible to install and has been breaking everything I have - - I can't imagine how these would be to eventually get off, either. Look, the idea is superb, but unless you have better luck or a shop, I'd look for a differrent solution.
Looking at installation videos is a must. After using soap on the beads of the tires I was finally able to install. Using the clips was also necessary just make sure you tip the clips parallel to the spokes which pushes the tire in closer to the center of the rim. I first attempted to install these with 23mm tires. After a mighty struggle I was able to get them installed only to find that the included valves did not seal against the rim. Switched to different rims and 25mm tires and was successful. Running lower tire pressures on a road bike was worth the hassle. 25mm feel like 28mm on a bike that wouldn�t fit 28mm.
Overall I really like the air-liner on my road bike. on the road bike it is primarily for safety so that if a tire tears and the sealant can't fix it, I don't get stuck or lose control (hopefully). These were really challenging to put on. Don't bother taking a spare inner tube because you won't get the tire off in a reasonable way without the included tool. they only add a few grams of weight but are worth the extra $ and grams because of the margin of safety they add.
Ignore the horror stories you will find elsewhere on the internet about impossible installation and damaged wheels. I've had standard clinchers that were harder to install. I installed the liners in 32 mm tires by just breaking the seal on one bead...didn't even lose the sealant that was already in the tire. Use the spacers that come with the kit to hold the bead in the valley of the rim while you re-install the tire then inflate. Inserts make popping the bead in place and inflating easier than ever!
There are videos, and instructions on how to install these inserts. I would suggest that you watch the video, and plan a few hours of being patient. But all the work to install these inserts is worth it! I love the confidence that you get from knowing that a sudden puncture is not going to cause you to lose control, or cause the tire to come off of the wheel. I have ridden on these inserts after losing air, and the sealant not working, and it is not ideal, but it will get you home. I use them on my main training bike, (30mm tires) and never worry about getting stranded out. I have also them in my mountain bike, and will add them to my gravel bike this spring. The valves that come with them are important to use, as they allow air in to the tire from the side. Other valves only allow air in from the end, which will initially be be blocked by the insert. I am talking about the kit. If you by the insert alone, then you need to find a valve that will work, and I feel like the only issue is with road tires, not with fat gravel or mountain bike tires.
Believe all of the horror stories, these things are practically impossible to install. Really not worth it in most cases. Only if you want a few miles of run-flat capability for some reason. I can't see them being useful in a race (limited speed, miles, and it may ruin the tire).
I use them on my race-commute bike and plan to ride them to work (12 miles at the furthest) if I have a flat that won't re-inflate.
I haven't had a flat so I can't really tell you if it works. But I have a few hundred miles in with no issues to date. It does add some weight but I'm a competitive cyclist, so I don't mind.