I had a bad experience, lately, with a tire plug kit. Getting ready to leave on Sunday AM, I discovered a sheet metal screw had done in my rear tire. My riding buddy pronounced that he had a tire plugging kit (never used, in fact, never opened). We attempted to use the kit (it shall remain nameless, but it has "semi-sticky" plugs and various tools for enlarging the hole in your tire so you can get the other tool inserted, then a threaded crank arrangement for forcing the mushroom-headed plug into the tire where, theoretically, you pull the mushroom head snug to the inner wall of the tire and it sticks and air pressure forces the seal and you are (again theoretically) on your way.
We opened the kit. First surprise - nothing available for inflation after accomplishing the repair. The hole we had to make in order to insert the tool was so large that the plug was inadequate to provide a seal (we know this because we were able to use an air compressor helpfully supplied by the hotel's maintenace guy, a fellow biker).
Further reading of the directions told us that the repaired tire would only be good for about fifty miles, at slow speed. (I was 320 miles from home.)
Has anyone used a tire patch / plug kit suitable for an "open road" incident that:
1. Worked
2. Allowed you to travel a reasonable distance at a reasonable speed
3 That you'd recommend to a fellow biker.
My solution was to leave the bike at the hotel, have it picked up by a towing service and hauled to the nearest dealer for tire replacement, then having SWMBO drive me up the following weekend to retrieve my bike. Don't ask what that cost.
Ralph
We opened the kit. First surprise - nothing available for inflation after accomplishing the repair. The hole we had to make in order to insert the tool was so large that the plug was inadequate to provide a seal (we know this because we were able to use an air compressor helpfully supplied by the hotel's maintenace guy, a fellow biker).
Further reading of the directions told us that the repaired tire would only be good for about fifty miles, at slow speed. (I was 320 miles from home.)
Has anyone used a tire patch / plug kit suitable for an "open road" incident that:
1. Worked
2. Allowed you to travel a reasonable distance at a reasonable speed
3 That you'd recommend to a fellow biker.
My solution was to leave the bike at the hotel, have it picked up by a towing service and hauled to the nearest dealer for tire replacement, then having SWMBO drive me up the following weekend to retrieve my bike. Don't ask what that cost.
Ralph
Comment