GIJOE
Gold Member
Does anyone use this tire balancing system in there vehicles? If so do you recommend it? Tire Balancing Products
Joe
Joe
GIJOE said:Does anyone use this tire balancing system in there vehicles? If so do you recommend it? Tire Balancing Products
Joe
texasjohn said:There was a thread on this maybe a year or so ago..... I looked into these beads.... some people like them... others don't/didn't understand how they worked (me included)... I decided against trying them... I decided that if I have a tire unbalance problem, there is something that I need to do other than put beads in it.... just my decision on the topic. Seems that it was a little pricey, too...
This is a good question. I think the answer is that it flows too easily and a bump in the road makes it oscillate and sometimes a lot of it sloshes over to the wrong side. Probably the vibe gets so bad that it will not correct until you slow down and reaccelerate. Seems like slime and that ilk would do better. It kinda makes you think tho, what this type of active balancing may do at real speed. If it goes out of wack it could take you right off the road. Also, losses in the 'fluid' exact a price on the rolling resistance, decreasing gas mileage.Dargo said:I'm not saying these systems don't work (I've never used them), so please don't take it that way, but why is it that when I once had a goon mount a tire that had about a gallon of water in it my results were not so great. I was in college and it about drove me nuts! For a while my car would run down the highway just fine. Then, all of the sudden, it would just about shake the darn dash out of my car! I'd stop to see what the problem was, find nothing, go on about my way and all would be fine.
I had them balanced twice. Each time the goon balancing the tire assured me that he'd found my problem. He said my tire was out of balance "big time". I'd end up with the same issues later that same day.Finally an old fella at a roadside service station offered to help when I stopped and told him that I had a tire about to shake my car apart and couldn't figure out why. He said he had an idea of what the problem was and broke it down. Sure enough, his thought was right. He got about a gallon of water out of that tire. He then properly balanced it and I never again had a problem.
My question is this; if water can flow around inside the tire just like a powder or beads and was a disaster, how do these products described previously work??
patrick_g said:They have to blow a lot of smoke to justify the high prices but the powders work so ceramic beads should work too and the non clumping is a bonus that may have me buying the beads for my next set of tires.
Pat
Redbug said:A few questions...With these self balancing beads, what happens when you pick up a nail or other puncture? If you plug the tire, will that cause the beads to clump around the plug? Same with a patch? Do most service stations know to save the powder/beads if they are patching the tire, (kinda like what Patrick was alluding to)?