I don’t care that they aren't on offer, these $9 tyre levers are the only ones I'll buy, Prime Day or otherwise
They're the only tyre levers I use, and I have three sets in case I lo❀se them

Tubeless tyre tech has made punctures a lot less common – unless you’re like my colleague Tom 🅰who staunchly refuses to go tubeless on the road – but at some point in every cyclist’s life there comes a time when you’ll have to take a tyre off a rim, and for that you’ll need a pair of tyre levers. In fact, along with a spare inner tube, a mini pump, and a multi tool, it’s only of the few things you really should never leave the house for a ride without.
Given it's currently 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Amazon Prime Day (or days) you're probably searching for a sweet sweet discount on a set of levers for your bike. If that's you, I'm here to help. Last year I spent some time testinꦿg a load of different levers, putting them through their paces mounting some famously difficult tyres (Challenge Strada, Continental 🍬Gatorskins, and the older Continental GP5000), and on the whole most were pretty rubbish.
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Tubeless tyres and rims gener﷽ally have a tighter fit, meaning the tyres are harder to get on and off, and so tyre levers have to be stronger than they used to be. The Muc-Off Rim Stix are the only levers I use now because they’re the only lever that has yet to let me down. I’ve bent the venerable Pedros out of shape pretty quickly on some, I’ve snapped many many others, and some are so flimsy you can bend them just 𓃲by looking at them.
These Muc-Off ones are strong, have a sharp enough lever end to get right under stubborn tyres, and while they’re a little bigger than most that also means better leverage. They aren’t on offer, but they’re honestly the only levers I’ll ride with nowadays and I’ve spent my hard earned cash on them myself. It’s the same reason our buyer’s guide for the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:best tyre levers contains only oไne product, and it’s the reason I packed a seat when we tested ꦉroad tyres in the lab; I swapped something like 35 tyres that day and they didn’t bat an eye.
Given that these are so cheap I'd go so far as to say you'd be a fool to buy anything else. You can't buy these on Amazon 𝓡in the States, however...
Incredibly, the only ones available at Amazon are priced incorrectly at $30+ (or you can buy a 24-pack of them at $124 but they never break so I'm not 🎉sure why you would!)
Lu𝓡cki♊ly you can pick them up at for $9, so there's no excuse.


How much did they pay you to write this?
I can hear the comments section firing up as we speak… &ldq🧸uo;This is clearly sponsored!!” I’m sure you’ll rage, but no, Muc-Off didn’t slip me a backhander to write this.
All I’ll say is this: They cost as little as £5 at full retail price. If I’m right (which I always am) you’ve spent a fiver on a very ꦇgood set of levers that will handle the toughest tyre/rim combinations. If I’m wrong (I’m not) you’ve either only wasted five pounds, or you ignore me totally and get yourself a cheaper, flimsy set of levers that may snap or bend when you need t🅠hem most.

Will joined the Cyclingnews team as a reviews writer in 2022, having previously written for Cyclist, BikeRadar and Ad🌄vntr. He’s tried his hand at most cycling disciplines, from the standard mix of road, gravel, and mountain bike, to the more unusual like bike polo and tracklocross. He’s made his own bike frames, covered tech news from the biggest races on the planet, and published countless premium galleries thanks to his excellent photographic eye🌠. Also, given he doesn’t ever ride indoors he’s become a real expert on foul-weather riding gear. His collection of bikes is a real smorgasbord, with everything from vintage-style steel tourers through to superlight flat bar hill climb machines.
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