I had to give up on a club ride yesterday and walk three miles to a station because of a puncture and the tyre was too tight to come off the rim. In the end, even in my workshop, the only way I could get it off was with two levers, one anchored on a spoke and a steel Z2 steerer over the other and taking a hammer to the steerer for a couple of minutes. Usually it's easier to get the second bead off, but in this case I had to do the same using the hammer again.
This is obviously ridiculous, but I have had something similar before, that time with a Conti tyre. This time it was a Rocket Ron Evo 2.1 in a X517 rim - I was able to replace it in the end with a Nobby Nic Evo 2.1 just using my fingers, so it can't be anything about Schwalbes per se. Presumably tyres are made very tight anyway nowadays (to be better for running with sealant maybe?), so any production variations can send you into impossible territory.
I have to admit that I had to use a lever to get the tyre on in the first place, so I should have made sure it was possible to take it off again before I put it back on the bike. You live and learn even at my age, so I won't use a tyre that needs a lever to fit it ever again. Needless to say, Sod's Law rules and having had no punctures all year, I had one within ten miles of fitting this tyre!
I just wondered whether anybody has had a similar experience with modern tyres, or any hints at how to get them off other than in the obvious way? Also is there anything I can do to the tyre to make it usable or is it a write-off?
This is obviously ridiculous, but I have had something similar before, that time with a Conti tyre. This time it was a Rocket Ron Evo 2.1 in a X517 rim - I was able to replace it in the end with a Nobby Nic Evo 2.1 just using my fingers, so it can't be anything about Schwalbes per se. Presumably tyres are made very tight anyway nowadays (to be better for running with sealant maybe?), so any production variations can send you into impossible territory.
I have to admit that I had to use a lever to get the tyre on in the first place, so I should have made sure it was possible to take it off again before I put it back on the bike. You live and learn even at my age, so I won't use a tyre that needs a lever to fit it ever again. Needless to say, Sod's Law rules and having had no punctures all year, I had one within ten miles of fitting this tyre!
I just wondered whether anybody has had a similar experience with modern tyres, or any hints at how to get them off other than in the obvious way? Also is there anything I can do to the tyre to make it usable or is it a write-off?