dale farley
09-25-2014, 11:36 PM
I was checking the air in my tires in preparation for the trip to St Louis when one of my valve cores stuck open. I tried pushing it several times with no luck and eventually the tire went completely flat. I went to NAPA and bought a pack of stems and replaced the leaking one. Unfortunately, the tire had settled and partially separated from the rim. I had Paulette hold the air chuck on the valve while I tried to pull the tire close enough to the rim for it to inflate. No luck.
Called my Good Sam Road Service and they told me they would only send someone if I wanted to replace the tire. They would not send someone to get it back on the rim and air it up.
It was getting late so I called my local tire repair shop and they sent a truck to make the repairs. The mechanic attached a tire chuck that held itself in place while air was flowing through the line, then he used the blaster to blow the tire back on the rim. Took about 10 minutes for the whole operation. Cost $119.
He then told me that I could have probably just connected my air chuck to the stuck valve and blown air in the tire and the core would have reseated and stopped leaking. I'm sure some of you already knew this, but I didn't.
But if one of yours starts leaking, remember to try blowing air back through it and see if that re-seats the valve core. The mechanic said they get stuck many times because when you pull or push the gauge on the tire it causes the core to get a little off centered and therefore, does not seat when you release it.
Called my Good Sam Road Service and they told me they would only send someone if I wanted to replace the tire. They would not send someone to get it back on the rim and air it up.
It was getting late so I called my local tire repair shop and they sent a truck to make the repairs. The mechanic attached a tire chuck that held itself in place while air was flowing through the line, then he used the blaster to blow the tire back on the rim. Took about 10 minutes for the whole operation. Cost $119.
He then told me that I could have probably just connected my air chuck to the stuck valve and blown air in the tire and the core would have reseated and stopped leaking. I'm sure some of you already knew this, but I didn't.
But if one of yours starts leaking, remember to try blowing air back through it and see if that re-seats the valve core. The mechanic said they get stuck many times because when you pull or push the gauge on the tire it causes the core to get a little off centered and therefore, does not seat when you release it.