Egon
Epic Contributor
12 northern pike
Hope you found someone to give them too. Sometimes they were referred to as Slough Sharks!
12 northern pike
Now pickerel on the other hand
Just a thought , is it possible that moisture in the valve stem freezes and pushes the valve off of it's seat a little and deflates the tyre ? Next day at the tyre shop the valve has thawed and shows no leak .
. I would not be too concerned with the relative expansion and contraction differentials between tire rubber and wheel materials. Can anyone offer evidence of EVER observing that?
OK Pat I will give you my example and you can tell me what you think. My fiance bought a new corolla During the spring. A couple of months after she bought it she hit a pothole and bent the rim. It did not lose air so she did not worry about it. She drove that car all summer making trips between my house and tulsa where she lived. She came to visit one weekend in the fall and it turned cold the night she was here. She woke up sunday morning and that tire was completely flat. I aired it up and tested for a leak and it was leaking where the rim was bent. I had some slime so I slimed it to see what happened. It held air with the slime and went to a salvage yard and got a used rim with a fairly new tire on it. we swapped out the tires and rims and kept her bent one for a a full size tire spare. She had that car for a another year and that tire never did lose any air. Now what would be your explanation of a tire running for several months without losing air then the first cold day we have it goes flat overnight. The leak that was found was not a nail but was leaking around the bent rim. I attribute that to the temperature change contracting the rim or the tire enough to lose the seal.
JJ you could be right and as I said before i bought her a good rim and tire and that one was kept for a spare for a while after. My opinion on it is that as the temperature went down the rim and tire contracted at slightly different rates and with the rim being bent that was enough for it to lose air. I wont ever know for sure unless someone has some studies on that issue.I think that the reason for the leak has been stated before, Say you have a bent rim and it holds air at 32 lbs not leaking for a year. It gets cold one night, and the tire pressure is reduced due to cold temp, and it starts to leak. That is sort of logical isn't it. I have aired up tires to 45 lbs, and found no leak, So I let some air out to the stated pressure on the tire, and it started to leak. This is also logical. That same car could have hit a pot hole that day and when night, and cold came, it started to leak. If you want to keep the tire and rim, then I would break it down, clean the rim, and put some tire bead sealant all around.