As if, what's the chance of damaging a tyre or wheel in the Lake District?
Not at all Ken if you avoid the potholesAs if, what's the chance of damaging a tyre or wheel in the Lake District?
We have roads here with pot holes you could hide a mini in, so I won't travel far without a spare. But, you can,t get those space saver tyres here easily, and if you could and then try to use it , "in my case anyway" it upsets the car, as I'm running rather large wheels. My solution is to put a 175 / 65 on the spare rim, It does fit.. both on the rim and in the boot when its fitted, It's large enough to not upset the car too much and carry on at highway speeds, however the wheel I take off has to go on the front passenger seat. Something my wife isn't thrilled about...Not at all Ken if you avoid the potholes
My Mitsubishi Outlander manual tells you in no uncertain terms that your tyre is royally goosed once you use the Devil's semen to bung up the puncture. Oh, and it also says it might not even fix the puncture!Many new cars don't even have a spare (wheel) nowadays. No point. Most drivers don't know where to put the jack and, if they did, they couldn't shift the overtight bolts with that tiny wrench anyway. And all that jumping on the wrench is likely to rock the car off the badly setup jack dropping the car on somebody's foot.
Many manufacturers nowadays save the space and the money and just give you a bottle of that tyre fix/inflate stuff. If you're lucky.
I'm quite able to change a tyre at the side of the road but I think I'd happily grab the goo so I can get on my way before some half asleep east european BigRig comes down the hard shoulder.My Mitsubishi Outlander manual tells you in no uncertain terms that your tyre is royally goosed once you use the Devil's semen to bung up the puncture. Oh, and it also says it might not even fix the puncture!
That is what I finally did. Followed the words of wisdom!If you think that you are proof against drastic tyre failure, then get rid of the spare . . . but if you live in the real world, hang onto it! I once had a massive rear tyre failure outside Calais, and drove over 500 miles home on the spare - far better than waiitng around frm Saturday morning to Monday afternoon - or later - to get a new 245-40X17, which in France is always a special order.
The spare does not ask for much, and only needs a periodic pressure check to give you peace of mind and keep you mobile. The spare is easy to remove and replace - if you practice from time to time, and if it looks a rusty mess it is time to clean, de-rust, and paint it. A bit of occasional work is better than being stuck by the roadside, or trusting in a can of goo - particularly if you have a long drive ahead of you.
A credit card and a phone are not the answer to all problems!
And in the event you are unfortunate to have an accident at this time you will probably kill or seriously injure your passenger .If you put the 'dead' wheel on the passenger's knees, remember to deflate it fully. A few years ago someone had an 'egg' in the sidewall, which suddenly burst while being carried by the passenger, the resulting sudden gush of air into her mouth fatally damaging her lungs.