The wheels on the bus go round and round until they don't......FLAT TIRE! Hey, Duke here, and for most drivers, at some point, you’re going to have a flat tire. Depending on how it was damaged, it may have to be replaced. But sometimes, a repair will do the trick, as long as the puncture isn’t on the sidewall and the hole is smaller than ¼ inch/6.35mm in diameter. Here are the three common ways your tire can be fixed so let's roll into it.
One way is to put a plug in the hole. Since most tires are damaged by running over sharp objects such as screws and nails, the small hole from which the air is escaping is on the part of the tire that touches the road. If it’s in the sidewall, it most likely can’t be fixed.
In the plug method, a technician inserts a rubber plug. It is covered with some sticky, gluey stuff and is pushed into the hole from the outside. That plugs the hole and stays in place, thanks to the glue. Friction from driving heats it and seals the deal.
Another method is to patch the hole. For this, your tire first has to be taken off the vehicle and then off the rim so the technician can get access to the inside. There, they’ll clean the inside surface around the hole and apply a rubber patch with an adhesive. This type of patch works well, and because of the extra steps and complexity, it costs more than having your tire plugged.
There’s also a combination of those methods just described, the plug-patch. It is, in essence, a type of patch with glue that has a plug sticking out of it. The plug is inserted into the tire from the inside and pulled through the hole from the outside, drawing the attached patch tight against the tire’s inside surface. The last two methods can’t be used if the hole is near another repair or the sidewall.
The good news is if it’s fixed properly, your repaired tire should give you good service.
Allied Auto Works
2073 Grant Road
Los Altos, CA 94024
6509687227
alliedautoworks.com