I am looking at a long journey without a spare and wonder what tyre gunk/weld people might recommend or suggest I avoid?
Thanks
Howard
IMO they're all as good/bad as each other. They'll get you out of the poo most times and cover you in sticky poo the rest.
If the cause (nail/screw/etc) has come out they tend not to work, so best to have a repair string type kit as well.
Thanks Adi.
Much appreciated advice.
I shall have a look today
My kit seems to be too light to flatten its tyres!
quote:
Originally posted by JoelP
My kit seems to be too light to flatten its tyres!
My vote goes to Slime. It's a preventive, as in you put in when your tyres are puncture free and forget it, any punctures you do get are instantly sealed.
In my experience they're much of a muchnes really. Most will get you out of trouble and off the side of the road.
Once used in a tyre, the puncture can't be repaired by a tyre fitter. I believe the tyre fitter has to bin the tyre and sell you a new one.
That said, calling a tyre fitter out to you at the side of the road can be £££ too + a long wait.
quote:
Originally posted by nick205 ...Once used in a tyre, the puncture can't be repaired by a tyre fitter. I believe the tyre fitter has to bin the tyre and sell you a new one...
I have an old Dunlop Reddiplug kit, but with the modern repair strings. I have repaied loads of tyres with it, the only failure was a 10mm bolt that
had gone through the tyre, bit too big a hole. New versions are available, but the one I bought was rubbish, so I got the old Dunlop kit.
I also carry an aerosol tyre repair, and my kids have a couple in their cars. I have been emphatic that if they get a puncture in a dangerous place to
use the foam to inflate it so they can get to safety.
I have had lots of recommendations for "stop n go" on another forum - yes I know that is cheating but it seems well respected in the USA - any thoughts on that over here?
quote:
Originally posted by adithorp
quote:
Originally posted by nick205 ...Once used in a tyre, the puncture can't be repaired by a tyre fitter. I believe the tyre fitter has to bin the tyre and sell you a new one...
Not quite true. You can repair them but you have to wash out all the fluid first (very messy) leave the tyre to dry (time consuming) and make a very good job of cleaning the surface prior to patching. Would I do it for my own or a mates tyre; yes. Would I do it for a random; probably not.
[Edited on 12-6-2023 by adithorp]
quote:
Originally posted by JoelP
My kit seems to be too light to flatten its tyres!