South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
As long as the hole is not in the side-wall, it should be able to be fixed, and if properly done will be as safe as an unplugged tyre. The safest 'plug' is what is commonly known as a 'mushroom plug'. This plug has to be inserted from the inside of the tyre (so the tyre has to be removed for this repair), and the 'head' of the mushroom vulcanises to the inner surface of the tyre, with the 'stem' going trough the hole to the outer surface.
you can get it fixed very easily, price anywhere from r20 to r50...most filling stations can even do it for you...
My spare tyre which is currently fitted in place of the flat one is identical to the other tyres so I was thinking of making the plugged tyre the new spare and keeping the spare as the permanent replacement for the plugged tyre.
My spare tyre which is currently fitted in place of the flat one is identical to the other tyres so I was thinking of making the plugged tyre the new spare and keeping the spare as the permanent replacement for the plugged tyre.
I got a short fat screw...
I was just talking from experience. Not something I over heard in a bar from a friend that heard it from his aunts next door neighbor's cat or something.
Usually when I say something it is always out of experience and because I am thee Rouxenator I am right in most cases.
The reason other people did not die while I did it was 1) there was no other people and 2) I had my fog lights off so should there be anyone else they would not get blinded by me thus causing an accident.
I was just talking from experience. Not something I over heard in a bar from a friend that heard it from his aunts next door neighbor's cat or something.
Usually when I say something it is always out of experience and because I am thee Rouxenator I am right in most cases.