Nonsense! Lol.
Anyway, I think it's a case of something being useful in a competitive or race environmentt and filtering down into everyday riding.
So, yeah, like anything in cycling then!
Anyway I guess this is my point:
Guy’s problem was no different than if he had a tubed set up and didn’t take a spare and a pump. Tubeless stops the majority of punctures and if it doesn’t, all you need to do is pop in a tube to get you home. If you’re not prepared and don’t have one that’s not the fault of the set up. With tyre plug tools, most times it just a case of plug, pump and go
- common sense says you still need to carry a spare tube any way.
I don't see much difference, if I need to take a tube and pump, then just running a tube in the first place. Like others have said, if you switch out tires/wheels even semi-regularly, it seems like maintenance on the trail vs maintenance at home at best/worst evens itself out.
Anecdotal evidence clearly supports taking either route. As is often the case! Personal preferences, often regardless of science, guide us all.
The bike industry, on the other hand, wants you to believe you're living in the past and holding everyone else up unless you hop on the latest advancement and trend immediately.
I still think it's a gimmick!
But only because I recently installed a tubeless compatible tire, and it took forever and all of my strength just to get it seated on the rim! Maybe it was a weird batch, or maybe I'm just gonna blame it on the fact it was "tubeless compatible" according to the packaging and I hadn't noticed that before or ever experienced such a battle to get a tire on!