Re:
I don't know why running tubes is somehow Luddite behaviour. Each to their own, I say.
I don't use sealant either, just stop and take a break while I change out a tube. What's the hurry?
For competitions I would answer differently. Being able to run much lower pressures without pinch flats obviously improves traction without the normal penalty. That is an edge you wouldn't want to live without, and I can understand people wanting to ride everyday with that advantage.
There is also the choice to drop down your pressures and ride carefully to achieve the same effect, so it really is up to the individual and their approach.
This reminds me of the old canti v discs debacle.
I have moved to discs as my preference after many years of being told I was a Luddite. I still have bikes with Vs and older cantis. Big deal.
I don't want to run 20psi on the harder parts of trails I use. I don't enjoy wasting a lot of energy on the nice flat parts. I don't want to jump off and drop down to 20psi when I get to the part it is beneficial for.
Riding XC I run 35 or so psi on large volume tyres generally. I have yet to encounter any trails that would demand much lower for traction.
My imagination is that people who run low PSI all the time are either riding the 'harder' routes at trail centres, or are happy to compromise a little by expending extra effort to have an edge when they get to the sticky parts of trails that otherwise don't need such extreme traction.
Like I say, each to their own.
A couple of my mates head out on full downhill rigs with all the armour on trails that are 80% genteel gradient XC. (They stop and play for a while on some more challenging sections.) Does that make them idiots?
I also ride with a chap who complained about punctures all the time before going tubeless.
He would ride over every trail features that I avoided.
Sometimes it is purely the technology compensating for a riding style that makes it hard to live without.
I am glad I grew up riding fully rigid, bending wheels and puncturing tyres daily. It gave me the impetus to select my path carefully.
Nowadays (at 4
I am comfortable hammering through rock gardens letting full suspension soak up the damage, but I still pick my route as though it wasn't there to help.
So, what I am saying in my usual long winded way is good for you if you enjoy tubeless.
Well done.
Just don't assume your way is the only way.