Tubeless ready rims w/ clinchers & tubes

So this morning I got a pucture "in the wild" for the 1st time since changing my commuter wheels to Kinesis Crosslight CX Discs, which happen to be tubeless ready.
I had a hard time getting the clincher tyres on the wheel in the 1st place, but this morning it was a proper nightmare, thumbs almost bleeding, took me half an hour to get the tyres back on again (eventually did it with the help of levers).
I now realise this is because of the "tubeless ready" feature of the rims. I would send the wheels back tbh, but I've now marked the rims with the amount of effort it took to mount the tyres.
So the question is...is going tubeless the answer?
I'm a bit concerned about the hastle of fitting them etc, and the mess of the slime sealant, and the extra costs involved...
...BUT ...I could be persuaded if I could be convinced that unless I have a very unlucky bad puncture then I should be able to just ride the tyres until they wear out, then only have the hastle once a year or whatever?
I had a hard time getting the clincher tyres on the wheel in the 1st place, but this morning it was a proper nightmare, thumbs almost bleeding, took me half an hour to get the tyres back on again (eventually did it with the help of levers).
I now realise this is because of the "tubeless ready" feature of the rims. I would send the wheels back tbh, but I've now marked the rims with the amount of effort it took to mount the tyres.
So the question is...is going tubeless the answer?
I'm a bit concerned about the hastle of fitting them etc, and the mess of the slime sealant, and the extra costs involved...
...BUT ...I could be persuaded if I could be convinced that unless I have a very unlucky bad puncture then I should be able to just ride the tyres until they wear out, then only have the hastle once a year or whatever?
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They are shockingly hard to get (certain, or most?) clincher tyres on and off. I had the same experiences as you. Luckily for the most part I didnt get so many punctures, at least at first then I got a run and...wow, stuck at the side of the road for 45 mins cos they were so hard to get on and off and I pinched a tube doing it and so on.
I'd be interested in any responses. I've gone back to my original DT swiss wheels for the time being, I'll use the kinesis wheels again in the winter with my Vittoria randonneur 32mm tyres - the only ones that aren't too bad getting on and off (but they are more heavy duty, and for winter use really)
1/ Make sure the rest of the bead is pushed into the well as far round as possible
2/ If running tubed DO NOT do up the valve locknut but push the valve into the tyre a bit so the valve stem doesn't interfere with getting the bead into the well, the last bit of bead to feed over should be at 90 degrees to the valve.
I use a tyre lever upside down to ease the last bit of bead over, use it upside down so it doesn't try and 'catch' the bead as you need to when removing the tyre, also you're less likely to snag the tube, a bit of lube if you have some handy helps as well.
Good advice re the bead being pushed as far into the middle as poss, I will definitely try that next time. I suspect it will not be easy though, as another problem with the wheels is that the rim tape is already coming loose & getting caught by the levers etc, so it might interfere with the bead as well.
Now run tubeless on both my bikes. A bit of a faff to start with but worth it IMO. Just passed 10,500 miles and only once have I had to stop and do anymore than put air in. That was a major headache at the time. Try getting a tubeinto a tubeless rim with a tubeless 23mm tyre!
Since then I have mastered patching them, mastered at home repairing any slow puctures or those that won't seal above 40/50 psi. Piece of piss really I can do it without removing the tyre just a bit of it.
Huge thread in Road beginers pinned ot the top
follow on
I've also got a pair of Pro lite Revo disc wheels - could barely get my trusty Randonneur on those without the help of some VAR tyre levers. Have since changed the Randonneurs to Hyper Voyagers, and they went on much easier. Have a more cushioned ride too. Might see if I can mount them tubeless now as went off road with them earlier, miles from anywhere, and was constantly concerned about pinch-flats knowing how difficult a tube change was likely to be
Its nice and sticky so hard to dislodge, thin and slippery (so interferes with tyre fitting less), cheap and lightweight (circa 5g a wheel versus upto 40g for rim tape) - sort of a utopian rim tape really!
Yes, the original hard plastic rim tape is probably the achilles heel of these wheels. That said, I'm not sure electrical tape would be upto the job of preventing inner tube punctures from spoke ends? Maybe OK for a ghetto tubeless conversion. If you do go tubeless, try and make a homemade inflator using a 2.5 ltr coke bottle (search YouTube for helpful vids). I was cynical but after using one Im a convert - makes quick seating of tyres a breeze!