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Home > General > Punctures . . . . |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
never heard of a breakdown company been able to charge the tyre off a rim etc, might be able to take to a 24/7 tyre fitter though
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6th Feb 2018 7:26 pm |
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Yorky Bob Member Since: 28 Apr 2015 Location: Yorkshire Posts: 4561 |
Foam may get you off a Motorway quicker but say goodbye to your tyre.
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6th Feb 2018 8:08 pm |
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dondiddy Member Since: 16 Apr 2017 Location: Hamilton Posts: 753 |
A few years I was travelling from Glasgow to the Midlands with a borrowed 4 wheeled car trailer to pick up a new Land Rover galvanised chassis. Arrived at the place for collection to discover the trailer had 2 punctures, one on each side and a flat spare also. Went to Halfords and bought 2 cans of tyreweld and used them both on the 2 punctures and they worked fine and both tyres were still holding air after a 250 mile trip home. Agree though that a tyre repairer won`t touch a tyre after tyreweld has been used. Certainly got me out a fix at the time and I always carry a can in the car although I also have a spare wheel. I think that a serviceable spare wheel is a requirement in the small print of most if not all breakdown companies before you can call them out because of a puncture. |
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6th Feb 2018 8:13 pm |
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MartynB Member Since: 08 Aug 2011 Location: Currently Rootless ! Posts: 1777 |
What's wrong with carrying a full size Spare ? It's the only guaranteed alternative . Any old wheel from eBay and a budget tyre will do the job. The breakdown services will happily put it on for you. Then you drive to ATS for a repair .Second choice is a space saver , to get you home . Again the breakdown services will put one on for you, although to be honest the Freelander 2 jack is actually quite efficient , the downside is you would get filthy changing the wheel, so some disposable gloves and a pair of disposable coveralls in the boot isn't a bad idea. As far as the goo and 12v inflators that are now commonly supplied with new cars go , you might get away with it on a slow puncture, they are questionable on a flat as they normally require the wheel to be rotated to spread the goo then finally inflated , and useless on a hole in the sidewall IMHO. 2009 GS Auto Zermatt Silver - Sold June 21 after 10 years of ownership 2016 Subaru Outback SE 2.0 diesel SE Premium Lineartronic Sold 2024 after 8 years and 80k miles . Best Car I ever owned ! 2023 Toyota Hilux invincible X 2.8 Auto . |
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6th Feb 2018 8:29 pm |
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Northcroft Member Since: 29 Jan 2017 Location: Durham Posts: 784 |
it WAS a hypothetical question, I always carry a full size spare
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6th Feb 2018 8:46 pm |
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Steve D Member Since: 19 Jan 2013 Location: Essexshire Posts: 4109 |
I have used the 'goo' on two motorcycle tyres - (slime). Got both bikes back from the South of France at normal speeds. As long as the tyre has a puncture in a repairable area and hasn’t suffered any secondary or run flat damage, it can be repaired properly as all 'goo' nowdays is water dissolvable and can be simply washed out of the tyre with cold water.
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6th Feb 2018 10:14 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4905 |
The ARB tyre repair kit works well, used it myself, but it takes some elbow grease & you need a compressor as well. You get to still keep your spare. Peace of mind!
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6th Feb 2018 10:15 pm |
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Spagley Member Since: 30 Dec 2014 Location: Looking for lost marbles (In deepest darkest Kent) Posts: 63 |
I have used the ARB type repair on a couple of tyres, and the plug does a very good repair.
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7th Feb 2018 5:11 am |
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Nick42 Member Since: 10 Mar 2011 Location: Fleet, Hampshire Posts: 29 |
The other essential is a proper extendable wheel wrench, most wheel nuts are way over torqued by the impact wrenches that garages use and getting them off with the supplied wrench is often impossible. The LR one is actually not bad but £10-15 on a proper job is money very well spent. |
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7th Feb 2018 10:02 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4905 |
A set or 2 of rigger gloves to save your knuckles jacking up the car are worth their weight in gold!
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8th Feb 2018 2:32 am |
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Spagley Member Since: 30 Dec 2014 Location: Looking for lost marbles (In deepest darkest Kent) Posts: 63 |
Funny how things evolve in parallel to overcome the same problems...
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8th Feb 2018 4:45 am |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4905 |
Also have a tow rope! Also sheet of plastic, 2 x hi vis vests, Jumper leads 67mm2 welding cable with solid copper alloy clamps & 4 litre air tank!
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8th Feb 2018 5:44 am |
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Worms Member Since: 31 Oct 2017 Location: Highlands Posts: 635 |
...and a carpeted wheel-well?! 2005 D3 2.7 Auto
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8th Feb 2018 6:16 am |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4905 |
Boat carpet so it can be washed out! It stops small thing rattling around. Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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8th Feb 2018 6:46 am |
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