There's A Screw In My Tire!
#1
There's A Screw In My Tire!
So I noticed the other day while checking tire pressure that there's a screw in my passenger side rear tire. Looks like this:
The air pressure is fine and the way the head of the screw is worn and the rubber directly around it isn't makes me think (hope?) that perhaps it's a small screw and it hasn't punched all the way through...
What do you think I should do next? Should I bring it to a tire shop to get it repaired, take it out and do a plug kit fix myself, or just leave it? We never drive far from home so I'm not concerned about getting stranded.
The tires only have 4,000 km on them, so I was thinking it might be worth it to have them fixed properly instead of DIY-plugged. How well do the DIY plug kits hold up?
The air pressure is fine and the way the head of the screw is worn and the rubber directly around it isn't makes me think (hope?) that perhaps it's a small screw and it hasn't punched all the way through...
What do you think I should do next? Should I bring it to a tire shop to get it repaired, take it out and do a plug kit fix myself, or just leave it? We never drive far from home so I'm not concerned about getting stranded.
The tires only have 4,000 km on them, so I was thinking it might be worth it to have them fixed properly instead of DIY-plugged. How well do the DIY plug kits hold up?
#3
I never run nice or expensive tires, so I usually just make it work, one way or the other.
I have been using Slime lately. About 8-12oz of Slime, pull the screw/nail and roll the tire. Stuff seals up pretty well, and no effort of driving a plug.
I still have my standard tire repair kit in the breakdown box the trunk just in case. I have run those plugs for thousands of miles on other cars with no problems.
I have been using Slime lately. About 8-12oz of Slime, pull the screw/nail and roll the tire. Stuff seals up pretty well, and no effort of driving a plug.
I still have my standard tire repair kit in the breakdown box the trunk just in case. I have run those plugs for thousands of miles on other cars with no problems.
#4
#5
So I noticed the other day while checking tire pressure that there's a screw in my passenger side rear tire. Looks like this:
The air pressure is fine and the way the head of the screw is worn and the rubber directly around it isn't makes me think (hope?) that perhaps it's a small screw and it hasn't punched all the way through...
What do you think I should do next? Should I bring it to a tire shop to get it repaired, take it out and do a plug kit fix myself, or just leave it? We never drive far from home so I'm not concerned about getting stranded.
The tires only have 4,000 km on them, so I was thinking it might be worth it to have them fixed properly instead of DIY-plugged. How well do the DIY plug kits hold up?
The air pressure is fine and the way the head of the screw is worn and the rubber directly around it isn't makes me think (hope?) that perhaps it's a small screw and it hasn't punched all the way through...
What do you think I should do next? Should I bring it to a tire shop to get it repaired, take it out and do a plug kit fix myself, or just leave it? We never drive far from home so I'm not concerned about getting stranded.
The tires only have 4,000 km on them, so I was thinking it might be worth it to have them fixed properly instead of DIY-plugged. How well do the DIY plug kits hold up?
FWIW....I had almost the exact thing happen (Phillips head screw)to my left rear rft. Drove it to a local tire dealer, they plugged it and no problems since.
#6
go to Harbor Freight, or Northern Tools and get a DYNAPLUG. Then pull the scew and do a bubble test. If there's a leak use this and quickly, easily plug the hole with no mess. I carry one in each car now and have run tires so plugged for many many safe miles. Much easier than a traditional plug kit.
http://www.dynaplug.com/
http://www.dynaplug.com/
#7
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#8
Thanks for the advice. Probably will bring it to the tire shop since my friend works at Kal Tire and said he can patch it from the inside free if it's under $50. Or maybe they'll take it out and find it's not punctured at all...
I'm probably going to get non-RF tires so putting together a plug, sealant, and compressor kit sounds like a good idea, though.
...sigh. All I ask for are smooth, debris-free roads...
I'm probably going to get non-RF tires so putting together a plug, sealant, and compressor kit sounds like a good idea, though.
...sigh. All I ask for are smooth, debris-free roads...
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