To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Alternate or upscale tire plugs?

fsae0607

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2011
Messages
2,290
Location
San Fernando Valley, CA
having repaired a few thousand tires, (and condemned a bunch as unrepairable), the really big problem with reairing a tire with a plug is you don't get to inspect the inside of the tire. I have seen lots of tires with what should have been very repairable injuries, that a plug would have worked for, but which had been driven flat or low long enough that the inner liner was coming apart from the heat. That's a blow out waiting to happen, and the way to find it is to dismount the tire.
100% agreed.

In my tire shop days, I used to be able to smell a tire and know right away if it was ran flat. They develop a sweet, burnt-rubber smell that's unmistakable. Upon dismounting, sure enough: shreds of inner liner!
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

churchofdirt

New member
Joined
May 17, 2024
Messages
1
I've plugged **** tons of holes with generic plugs , slime plugs, western weld plugs ect. I don't bother with the reemer anymore I use a drill bit. I feel like the glue does work in situations where the hole is big and requires 2 plugs. I've ran them in side walls of my tires for hundreds of miles till the tires were bald on a few occasions and not going slow by any means. I still have 1 in the side wall of my Cummins and I tow 20k+, Tire plugs are pretty damn reliable if they're done right. I've seen a number of people quickly yank the plug applicator out after pushing the plug in the tire, I always pull the tool out slowly and carefully so the plug doesn't pull back out. No pun lol..... My 2 cents
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

seber

Well-known member
Joined
May 31, 2016
Messages
4,205
Location
Deep East Tx.
The stick in plug will get you back on the road if you are lucky. Day one with my new Miata I picked up a screwdriver bit in a rear tire. Put one of those plugs in it. (Miatas do not have a spare tire.) I got about half a mile before it blew back out. Those things are hit or miss. Bigger holes are pretty much the miss part. The only ones I trust are patch and fill from the inside. I use plenty of goop on the stem with them. Never had that system fail even on sidewalls. I know, never patch a sidewall BS.
 

acer66

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 4, 2010
Messages
4,418
Location
Western North Carolina
I've carried and used them all. I've had punctures that a Stop-n-go couldn't seal and
I don't carry one anymore. I've never had a puncture that one or more gummy worms couldn't seal. My favorite gummy worms are from The Nealey Company. I got a wide shale cut in my rear tire on the Dempster Highway in Canada and I made it out with six Nealey gummy worms crammed into a wide slash. I had to stop twice to air it up again. On the Dempster a tow truck is tomorrow and $1,000.

DSC00208-M.jpg

DSC00190-M.jpg
Might have to get me some since they are heavily plugged over at advrider too.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom