I hate flat tires; changing them isn't too bad when you have a good floor jack and an impact gun. It can be a pain with the stock tube jack and a lug wrench not even half as long as my arm, on a graveled uphill surface. Vent over.
I drove the B to work yesterday, no problems. Came out to go to lunch and my right rear's flat as a pancake. (I knew that when I had my tires replaced, one of them got a tube because the threaded area for the valve stem was rusted out. The flat turned out to be the one with the tube.
I took the offending tire to a service station to get it checked out. They say that the tube ruptured and they had replaced it. The tire was flat again this morning; my question is, what would cause a tube to be punctured or rupture inside the tire?
I half-suspect that the station people may not have done anything with the tire, except to fill it with air, charge me $$$ and hand it back to me.
I drove the B to work yesterday, no problems. Came out to go to lunch and my right rear's flat as a pancake. (I knew that when I had my tires replaced, one of them got a tube because the threaded area for the valve stem was rusted out. The flat turned out to be the one with the tube.
I took the offending tire to a service station to get it checked out. They say that the tube ruptured and they had replaced it. The tire was flat again this morning; my question is, what would cause a tube to be punctured or rupture inside the tire?
I half-suspect that the station people may not have done anything with the tire, except to fill it with air, charge me $$$ and hand it back to me.