Quote:
Originally Posted by spinejaruk
most places here won't repair it because it is too near the side wall (actually on the shoulder - unpredictable stress and movement) I did a bit of reading up on this before deciding to replace it.
It's interesting to know the different safety standards that exists in different parts of the world. You must have really nice roads in N America!
I have kept the original tyre to have it repaired at a later date - I just need to find a spare steelie somewhere for it to keep as spare. I have these nasty little space saver wheel in the back, I just need to figure a way to carry a full size wheel as it wont fit in the well. The rear seats had to be put forward just to put the original tyre in the back!
|
you can safely repair shoulder punctures so long as they are smaller than an 1/8 of an inch and they have not cut any cords in the sidewall. you do have to use a uniseal (patch/plug in one unit) type repair and have someone who knows what they are doing the repair and it will have no problems