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Caravan or Towing In this forum you can post anything with regards to caravaning or towing. |
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03-12-2009, 18:29 | #1 |
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tyre seal / tyre weld etc.
hello everyone, its nearly christmas
anyway thats got nothing to do with my question i am just getting excited, i am desperate for socks, hankies and aftershave my query is: has anyone any experience of tyre weld type puncture repair stuff? does it scrap the tyre? does it inflate and fix? etc. I am not thinking for large 4x4 tyres as we all carry a spare for that, but i tow many different trailers and caravans and you just can't carrry a spare for them all can you? or you would have no rooom for anything else lol so opinions / suggestions please |
03-12-2009, 18:49 | #2 | |
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03-12-2009, 19:18 | #3 | |
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id go tyre weld and a plug in compressor little one ... just to get you mobile again |
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03-12-2009, 19:45 | #4 |
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Its brilliant stuff so long as you dont rely on it as a permanent repair. Thats why its generally a jazzy colour so when you regularly examaine your tyres you'll spot it.
I know a fair few folk (mainly bikers) who swear by it and could tell you stories all day. I'm also aware of a vehicle fleet that uses it and they run everything from vans to high performance vehicles with it fitted and no problems, completely the opposite in fact. To avoid balance problems use the correct amount for your tyre size and be patient because when you first put it in it needs to find its own level as it spreads and will feel out of balance for a few miles. On a personal note I put it in the tyres on my last caravan as a bit of a confidence ting and one benefit I found was that the tyres held their pressure far better. I dont mean anything radical just in the 6 months it was in I never had to pump them up You can now get the goo that washes out with plain water (not all types used to) so it'll clean out and the tyre can be repaired as if it wasnt there. You cannot use it with powder balancing if you have that fitted, for obvious reasons, you'd just end up with a useless sludge sloshing around in the tyre Hope that helps. I'm not any kind of expert but on a n other forum a very anal tyre fitter had a downer on the stuff and the more I researched the better it looked and his anti argument fell at every hurdle. Thats other than DONT treat it as permanent repair, its a get you home save the tyre deflating at an inconvenient point measure. |
03-12-2009, 19:47 | #5 |
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Now then Problem with that stuff as I found out years ago on an expensive tyre (remember when 185/60x14's were high tech high performance ) was that you often (or is it usually?) cant repair the tyre afterwards.
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03-12-2009, 20:49 | #6 |
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i wasn't thinking of stuff you pour in and leave in, as that wouldn't solve the problem, to do that it would have to be my own trailer / caravan and then i would have a spare wheel!
I was thinking of somehting i could carry and use is neccesary, it seems tyre weld may be the answer. something like this: http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/2X-TYRE-WELD-T...item414af661a5 so does in ruin the tyre then? or can it be fixed again properly? I don't fancy forking out for scrapped tyres funy you should talk of tyre sizes that used to be exspensive, some of them are again for example 175r 13 8 ply tyres and 6 ply tyres fit many trailers but also used to be standard fit on many small vans, and of course mini 10 inch tyres, they are like hens teeth now! unless you are prepared to pay top wack and i am too mean LOL |
03-12-2009, 21:33 | #7 |
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Theres a lot of talk about this over on the Zed forum, as they came equipped with RFTs when new, and while they are great in theory, the Bridgestones they put on are hard as feck and don't do a lot for the already hard ride.
A lot of people therefore put non-RFTs on, even on the //M, and since theres no room for a spare in these love machines, a can of Tyre-Weld in the boot is de rigeur. Experience has been mixed, ranging from people with no problems, to folk who've had tyres scrapped because the fitters say they can't clean them (sometimes credible, sometimes not), through to a couple of blokes who had alloy rims permanently damaged by whatever crud it is gets squirted in. And on that forum its relevant; I've just bought a set of 18"' 8.5J five-spoke BMW alloys that need to take 255x35xR18 91Y tyres - in RFT form they would be close to £200 a corner for the right quality tyres....non-RFTs (and they highly recommend Falken 452s surprisingly) come in around half that, so even if a tyre does get trashed, you're still in pocket. Problem with the RFTs is that, while you can run 50-100 miles completely deflated in safety, the likely damage to the sidewall from doing so often means they are skipped anyway. So while they certainly 'get you home' its often at a price! Also heard plenty of other stories from people who say they've tyre-welded a punctured wheel and subsequently run it into the ground with no problems..... So its where I'm going with the old Zed. PS - interested to hear what the water-soluble stuff Dave refers to is??? Sounds like a good compromise.... |
03-12-2009, 23:05 | #8 |
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thanks for the input so far!
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03-12-2009, 23:10 | #9 |
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Hi ya Plank
here is the stuff i have been supplying for a number of years. http://www.ultraseal.biz/home1.htm Never had any complaints as yet? but have had many thanks? Best time to install the stuff is on a new tyre, as your get the best value for money. trouble is you will never no if you get a puncture as the tyre reseals itself up to 6mm hole but it wont protect the side wall yes you can balance the tyre afterwards just have to follow the instructions have done a number Nissan 4x4 owners cars and caravans as well as ambulances and funeral cars in the past I have it in 25lt drums and pump in the correct amount according to tyre size |
03-12-2009, 23:16 | #10 | |
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04-12-2009, 00:55 | #11 |
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I understand Plank that with Tyreweld, you simply squirt it into the valve when you have a puncture and then drive it for a few miles, which apparently inflates the tyre further, then top it p with air as soon as you can, but allegedly it almost does the job for you....the portable air pump (£25-£35) is just a backup.
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04-12-2009, 02:02 | #12 | |
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and who's idea was that ? grandad |
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04-12-2009, 08:45 | #13 |
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04-12-2009, 17:52 | #14 |
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calm down ladies
I think you will find it was my idea, well i started the thread so i'm claiming it anyway I have a couple of the little compressor things hanging around as they are good for trailer tyres, I even made an extension lead so it wil reach back from the car, so it looks like getting the comma sealer i posted a link too above, hopefully i wont ever need it, but it makes you paranoid when you dont have a spare doesn't it? did you know that a standard AA or RAC policy wont come out to a flat tyre on a trailer or caravan! you need extra cover for that! |
04-12-2009, 20:30 | #15 |
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Hi Plank
Re caravans - you may know that Hobby caravans no longer supply spare wheels with their new units, they include a 12 volt compressor and a bottle of the tyre sealant as described. I've gone down the 'belt and braces' road and have both spare and compressor/sealant for my 'van. Don't fancy crouching too long beside a flat tyre on a European autoroute with Gerry whizzing past at 160 kph+ on way to throw his towel on a beach lounger in Marbella! Rgds CL |
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