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Second MG tire puncture in less than six months!

DrEntropy

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And on a set of new Kumho tires. I don't drive through klag, no boonie stomping, all main arteries. Last time was a spiked, threaded metal piece looking like the knob from a DIY 134a "kit" that punctures the can. This time a two-inch piece of an apparent 6D nail, rusty, with no head. Too close to the sidewall to patch. Ordered TWO tubes from Summit, figuring I'll have one on hand when the third time comes around the corner.

Fifty years of driving and until recently could count the number of punctures on three fingers. I guess I'm overdue.
 

DNK

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Got any TR neighbors??
Thumbs Up.jpg
 
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DrEntropy

DrEntropy

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Not to my knowledge. A 1970 Fiat 124, and a "Pagoda top" Benz, but they're both friends as well as neighbors.

But there is a clan of barbarians two doors away... hmmm...
 

TR3driver

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Punctures happen. Few years back, I had two not just in the same day, but on the same trip! Was on my way to a date no less (after first wife passed away). Since I only had one spare, the second time I had to call and beg for help! Fortunately I got within a few miles of her place and she didn't mind too much. (She's now my wife.)

Also had a rash of them where I used to work. Apparently there was some construction going on in one of the other buildings in the complex and the workmen were sloppy with screws and such. I finally gathered up 4 or 5 of them and went to the complex manager to complain.
 

catfood

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In thirty plus years of driving I have had three punctures. All in the same car within the span of a couple of years (and I only had the car for three years in total). I think some cares attract them! :rolleye:
 

NutmegCT

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I got my first car in 1966. From then until last summer - never a puncture or "flat" tire.

Then I got my new Nissan Altima. Within the first 30 days of ownership, the right rear tire went soft due to a bent rim. Got a new tire and rim. One week later, right rear tire went soft - due to a nail.

They're out to get us ...
 
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DrEntropy

DrEntropy

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Went outside Saturday AM to run the MG to a local Big Box store for a keyboard. A client called early saying their keyboard had quit working. Multiple "dead" keys. Go to the B, left rear FLAT. This was the spare with a tube in it. Had been in the boot for six months holding air. Less than fifty miles and it went flat... pinched inner-tube, installed by Tire Kingdom. Jacked the car up, took the flat spare and the tire with the nail puncture to TK to swap tires/rims and another tube. They did the swap but would NOT install another tube in the spare. The sales minion had called the GM and was told not to do it. I guess the TK tire busters are not experienced enough to put a tube in a rim! Next stop, a Goodyear store we've known for a couple decades. Surely they've got ~someone~ who knows the procedure. If we still had the shop this would have been a no-brainer. *sheesh*
 

waltesefalcon

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Someone refused to put a tube in a tire? That is nuts, next thing I'll hear is that shops are no longer patching tires.
 
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DrEntropy

DrEntropy

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They knew they'd "pinched" the last one and likely had nobody in the shop who'd ever put a tube in a car tire. Got it sorted today.
 
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I feel for you and puncturing a new tire. When I bought the daily driver Toyota clipped a piece of road debris which punctured a sidewall less than 5 miles after pickup. Of course warranty didn't cover it. But figured I'd get away with just replacing the one tire rather than the recommended both since little nubs hadn't even worn off yet.
 

DavidApp

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As far as I remember the UK and probable all of the EU have not repaired tires for years. Use to have to vulcanize the patch then they banned patching. Things may have changed as this was in the 1970s

David

Someone refused to put a tube in a tire? That is nuts, next thing I'll hear is that shops are no longer patching tires.
 
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DrEntropy

DrEntropy

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What sort of tubes are you using?

Radials. Wasn't the tube, it was the tire buster on short salary and no training IMO. Nobody uses tubes anymore. "Old School" tire tech is mostly lost to history.
 

LarryK

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I had a 73 XJ6 and just pit a new set of Michelins with tubes on. Coming home from work the next day on a 6 lane interstate, saw blue smoke out the back and puled over thinking I had an oil leak. Rt rear tire down and hot and smoking. Removed with gloves and threw in ditch of water. Went to dealer and got a new tire and tube. Next day same thing happened, so I went to another dealer, a truck center, and explained what was happening. I left the Jag and got a phone call in a couple hours and they said it was done. Dropped in and was told they replaced all 4 tubes as the new Michelin tubes had pinhole leaks in them. Went back to the original dealer and showed them the tubes and actually was reimbursed for the tubes and install fees. The heavy duty truck tubes lasted another 5 yrs when I sold the Jag.
 
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DrEntropy

DrEntropy

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Larry said:
The heavy duty truck tubes lasted another 5 yrs when I sold the Jag.


:thumbsup:
 

waltesefalcon

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"As far as I remember the UK and probable all of the EU have not repaired tires for years. Use to have to vulcanize the patch then they banned patching."

Wow, at one time I patched my fair share of tubes and tires. I worked in a tire shop for about a year in college. I was the only young guy who wasn't afraid to break down truck tires (everyone had heard about the "widowmakers" and assumed split rings were the same as the old Firestone split rims and so they refused to work on them), as a result I wound up mostly doing truck tires. The owner of the shop was sad to see me leave when I got a work study job the next year. I did stay in pretty good shape rolling around 10.00/20s all day and the money was good.

'"Old School" tire tech is mostly lost to history.'

It's a shame but it is also the way of the world.
 

Gliderman8

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I have the ORIGINAL tubes I installed in the tires of my Lambretta; I put new ones in in 1969.... yes, really!
 

waltesefalcon

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I prefer patches over plugs every time.
 
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