Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it?

   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it?
  • Thread Starter
#11  
I would put a small paint mark on the rim at the hole..
That way if, when it goes flat you know where to start looking..

Yep, I marked the rim with a Sharpie.

Haven't put a ton of hours on the tractor this week, but so far the tire is still holding air.
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #12  
No rim mark required. Simply remember by the markings on the tire.

If you don't have one, buy a plug kit.
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #13  
Interesting discussion,
I had one rear go darn close to flat when snow blowing.
Fortunately I had a can of air to inflate enough to get home where I kind of over inflated to continue.
That was 2 years ago and that tire never lost pressure since.
Tire is tubbed and filled with beet juice, might the juice plugged the hole?

Still wonder to this day if I have an actual puncture.
I speculate that perhaps a loose binder might have 'flicked' the valve to allow air out, that or slime did a plugging job.

Notice I took the 'let well enough alone' approach and simply monitor pressure from time to time.
That's going on 100 hours or so.
Fingers crossed.
Repairing a punctured slime filled tire is no simple chore, basically a job for professionals!
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #14  
Interesting discussion,
I had one rear go darn close to flat when snow blowing.
Fortunately I had a can of air to inflate enough to get home where I kind of over inflated to continue.
That was 2 years ago and that tire never lost pressure since.
Tire is tubbed and filled with beet juice, might the juice plugged the hole?

Still wonder to this day if I have an actual puncture.
I speculate that perhaps a loose binder might have 'flicked' the valve to allow air out, that or slime did a plugging job.

Notice I took the 'let well enough alone' approach and simply monitor pressure from time to time.
That's going on 100 hours or so.
Fingers crossed.
Repairing a punctured slime filled tire is no simple chore, basically a job for professionals!

And most of the places that I know of will charge you accordingly. I stopped using it years ago due to the mess it makes. The only exception is when I don't plan to reuse the rim for some reason.
Or in an emergency, such as if I was snowblowing and needed it to get the tractor home. ;)
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #15  
Just a couple of days ago I noticed a screw head on the tread of one the front tires on my truck. To pull or not to pull. I have a really good mushroom plug kit, so I pulled the screw. It turned out to be all of 1/4" long and in the meatiest part of the tread. I guess if you're gonna pick up a screw......
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #16  
Just a couple of days ago I noticed a screw head on the tread of one the front tires on my truck. To pull or not to pull. I have a really good mushroom plug kit, so I pulled the screw. It turned out to be all of 1/4" long and in the meatiest part of the tread. I guess if you're gonna pick up a screw......

I was pumping gas one day and looked down to see a nail stuck in my tire. Drive across the street to the tire shop thinking they would dismount, plug/patch and get me on my way.

Ended up yanking most of a several y corroded framing nail out of my lug, was stuck sideways. Got **** Lucky.


Currently have a couple roofing/panel nails stuck in the tractor as a result of demo work. Leaving them there as the air seems fine.
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #17  
I never leave anything stuck in a tire. I'd rather address it on my terms in the shop on concrete than somewhere on the road or in the timber. :)
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #18  
I never leave anything stuck in a tire. I'd rather address it on my terms in the shop on concrete than somewhere on the road or in the timber. :)

I dont leave anything stuck in the tire either, pull it out, check for leak with soapy water, no leak, leave it alone. If it aint broke dont fix it.
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #19  
My dad had a slow leak in his tire so he pulled a nail out, then he had a fast leak. He put some glue on the nail, inserted it back into the hole, and drove to town to have it fixed. I believe he bought a new set.
 
   / Screw in front tire, no air leaking, should I worry about it? #20  
I’ve got screws in low pressure tires that I put there on purpose to plug a hole. I’ve got at least 3 screws in tires between my vehicles and none of them leak so I don’t bother fixing them.
 
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