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review

Orro Road Tubeless Kit

8
£26.99

VERDICT:

8
10
Good quality components that are easy to use and give peace of mind
Weight: 
242g

At road.cc every product is thoroughly tested for as long as it takes to get a proper insight into how well it works. Our reviewers are experienced cyclists that we trust to be objective. While we strive to ensure that opinions expressed are backed up by facts, reviews are by their nature an informed opinion, not a definitive verdict. We don't intentionally try to break anything (except locks) but we do try to look for weak points in any design. The overall score is not just an average of the other scores: it reflects both a product's function and value – with value determined by how a product compares with items of similar spec, quality, and price.

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Bike brand Orro has added a new Road Tubeless Kit to its list of accessories and it all works well. The sealant does a good job of closing up holes and cuts in your tyres and the valves and tape are up to the job. It's competitively priced against the best in the business too.

  • Pros: Sealant seals punctures at high pressure; rim tape is robust
  • Cons: Nothing really

With more and more tubeless-compatible tyres and wheels coming into the marketplace, ditching your inner tube isn't as costly a swap as it was a year or so ago. Many bikes are even specified with tubeless-ready wheels as standard, so conversion kits like this one from Orro make for a simple solution.

> Find your nearest dealer here

> Buy this online here

On test we have the Road Pack A, which includes two bottles of sealant (60ml each), two 50mm long tubeless valves, and a 22mm x 10m roll of rim tape. There is a pack containing 70mm valves if you are running deep-section wheels, and there is also a pack for gravel bikes and another for mountain bikes.

Orro Road Tubeless Kit.jpg

The tape is 22mm wide, which is suitable for internal rim widths of 20-21mm. That covers most road rims, and being 10 metres in length there is enough to wrap at least four wheels.

There is plenty of adhesive on the back, so once it is stuck to your rims it shouldn't move, and it's a decent balance of thickness versus flexibility so that it follows the profile of your rim bed without creasing up.

The valves look to be pretty generic, and the two different rim bed shapes I tried them on didn't cause any issues when it came to sealing around the rubber grommet. On the pack it says there should be a valve key to remove the valve core so you can add the sealant, but there wasn't one in ours; luckily, I have plenty kicking around.

The sealant itself isn't one I've seen before. It's grey in colour, with the fibres for sealing bigger cuts and gashes being black.

As luck would have it, the tyres I was using shrugged off punctures through the test period, so I had to take things into my own hands with a drawing pin.

I'd inflated the 25mm tyre to 100psi, and jabbing it with the pin saw the sealant close the hole pretty quickly, with the tyre only losing about 30psi in total. What's more, the sealant held that pressure for the next 24 hours – some sealants struggle to hold anything over 50-60psi.

> What they don’t tell you about tubeless

Using a scalpel to create a slit around 5mm long saw the sealant do its job again. The tyre lost a little more pressure, but once pumped up it held 70psi again. Go up to 85psi, though, and it would blow out.

If you run high pressures, you could easily patch the inside of the tyre once you got home.

The sealant has been in the tyres for around a month, so it's early days to be able to tell how long it is going to last. I'll keep an eye on it. At the start of the test period the temperatures were in the mid-20s, while at the time of writing we are looking at the low-teens.

We have tested a fair few tubeless conversion kits, but different combinations of parts makes judging the overall value of the Orro a little tricky.

One that is very similar is the Stans NoTubes Road Bike Tubeless Kit, which also offers two tubeless valves, a roll of rim tape and two bottles of sealant for £32, a fiver more than the Orro.

Overall the Orro kit performs well and delivers everything you need to go tubeless for decent money.

Verdict

Good quality components that are easy to use and give peace of mind

road.cc test report

Make and model: Orro Road Tubeless Kit

Size tested: 50mm valves

Tell us what the product is for and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?

A full kit to set up your wheels and tyres tubeless.

Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?

Orro tubeless kits contains:

2x60ml or 1x240ml Tubeless Sealant

2x70mm or 2x50mm Tubeless Valves

1x22mm or 1x30mm Tubeless Rim Tape

1x Valve Key

Rate the product for quality of construction:
 
8/10
Rate the product for performance:
 
8/10
Rate the product for durability:
 
8/10
Rate the product for value:
 
8/10

Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose

All of the components do a great job.

Tell us what you particularly liked about the product

Sealant works well.

Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product

No valve key in the bag.

How does the price compare to that of similar products in the market, including ones recently tested on road.cc?

On a like for like comparison to something like the Stans kit, it's a fiver cheaper.

Did you enjoy using the product? Yes

Would you consider buying the product? Yes 

Would you recommend the product to a friend? Yes

Use this box to explain your overall score

The sealant works well, as do the other components, and the price is very good.

Overall rating: 8/10

About the tester

Age: 41  Height: 180cm  Weight: 76kg

I usually ride: This month's test bike  My best bike is: B'Twin Ultra CF draped in the latest bling test components

I've been riding for: Over 20 years  I ride: Every day  I would class myself as: Expert

I regularly do the following types of riding: time trialling, commuting, club rides, sportives, fixed/singlespeed

As part of the tech team here at F-At Digital, senior product reviewer Stu spends the majority of his time writing in-depth reviews for road.cc, off-road.cc and ebiketips using the knowledge gained from testing over 1,500 pieces of kit (plus 100's of bikes) since starting out as a freelancer back in 2009. After first throwing his leg over a race bike back in 2000, Stu's ridden more than 170,000 miles on road, time-trial, track, and gravel bikes, and while he's put his racing days behind him, he still likes to smash the pedals rather than take things easy. With a background in design and engineering, he has an obsession with how things are developed and manufactured, has a borderline fetish for handbuilt metal frames and finds a rim braked road bike very aesthetically pleasing!

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5 comments

Avatar
cyclefaster | 3 years ago
0 likes

This may be a silly question I'm not sure if I quite understand what this is for.

Is this to convert clincher wheels to take tubeless tyres, or do you already need to have tubeless ready wheels?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to cyclefaster | 3 years ago
0 likes
cyclefaster wrote:

This may be a silly question I'm not sure if I quite understand what this is for. Is this to convert clincher wheels to take tubeless tyres, or do you already need to have tubeless ready wheels?

It looks like you need tubeless ready wheels and this is just the components you may need to run tubeless (often tubeless ready wheels will already have the relevant rim tape and valves supplied).

Avatar
cyclefaster replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

Thanks, that makes sense

Avatar
Miller | 4 years ago
0 likes

It's good that kits like this get people started with tubeless but if you're maintaining several sets of tubeless wheels then you need to get your supplies more economically. 10m rolls of tubeless tape are expensive for what they are and will only do two wheels with a recommended double wrap on the rim. Search for Tesa 4289 tubeless tape and you can find long rolls at a more attractive price.

Avatar
Joe Totale | 4 years ago
1 like

For that price it'd have been nice to have a syringe. I always use one as it's far more precise when measuring the sealant and there's also less risk of it all going wrong and getting very messy! 

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