All this systems give some amount of protection. However, a piece of glass that is big enough will make his way through any of the above protections. I propose you here a cheap and hopefully effective alternative. Of course this armouring increases rolling resistance and weight. However, these effects cannot be noticed in my 20 inches folding bicycle and I really don't care.
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Material needed:
- old tires, thinner than the tires to be protected,
- self-retracting tape measure;
- an old brake cable
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The brake wire may rust as well, it would be better to fix the tape with other means.
Caveat--my first try was with duck tape, not tube, and that also cut the inner tube, believe it or not....
With today's polymer technology, it's probably possible to make some sort of solid composite with similar performance, and such things may even be commercially available, but a solid-rubber tire is no better an idea today that it was in the 1800's.
(Sorry)
Performance of solid tires is known to be bad, probably worst than that of my armoured tire
I use the bike for commuting, high performance is not relevant. Reparing a flat under the rain, on the night, by very cold weather, or when you are late to come to work is anoying. Without punture protection I used to have several flats a year, and I didn't like them.
j/k, nice Instructable!
You are right. I have no idea where the 80% comes from. Sorry, by writing a number my comment looks as statistics!
Percentages without "confidence interval" should not be seriuosly considered.