โJan-29-2015 07:14 AM
โDec-22-2015 07:40 AM
aeejbe wrote:
This post is few months LATE on this thread. But interesting reading because recently I had to deal with an elusive leak from one of my tires... ... ...Or so I thought.
Found myself blaming the tire, & then blaming a defective(?) Borg Valve Stem, & then seriously hating on the tire repair shop for not trying hard enough to find the problem.
Turned out to be the damaged WHEEL that was the culprit. A tiny break in the weld seam caused by TOO MANY BAD POTHOLES along a certain stretch of interstate road in a certain other state. (Oh yeah. I remembered it well). Just another case of my tax dollars NOT working hard enough โ soon enough! In my case, the cost of a new wheel was actually less than paying for a new tire.
And btw IF itโs not too late, & youโre still bent on getting more service from that tire they say is un-repairable... ... ...
Go "the old school route" & put an inner tube inside, & keep it rolling as a spare!
โDec-22-2015 06:31 AM
โMar-07-2015 07:10 AM
Pekenoe wrote:
air the tire up, remove the extension, reinstall the extension to check pressure or check without extension in a week. still have loss, not the extension. Check original valve core or replace, repeat. I had loss around the threads on my extension, dab of silicone on the threads cured the problem.
โMar-07-2015 07:04 AM
โMar-05-2015 03:31 PM
Horsedoc wrote:
If you think it IS from a valve leak, you might try an old farm boy trick we used to use years ago. Take the valve stem out, put a light coating of Vaseline on it and re-insert. Saved a lot of foul language after we discovered that you can over tighten if you keep twisting.
โMar-05-2015 01:35 PM
โMar-05-2015 01:14 PM
โFeb-05-2015 06:54 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
Not sure about your rims but I do not have to dismount the tire to replace a valve stem. All I need to do is just compress the tire enough to reach the valve stem and replace it. Then you just let the tire spring back to be ready to inflate it again. The bottom bead is never broken.
โFeb-05-2015 06:33 AM
โFeb-05-2015 05:38 AM
โFeb-02-2015 07:15 PM
โFeb-02-2015 11:37 AM
JimM68 wrote:
If it's there... bite the bullet, ask them to"
Dismount it.
Inspect the inside.
Replace the entire valve assembly
Remount.
True and balance.
Odds I think are about 99% that this entire procedure will give you a tire that doesn't leak at the end of the day..
โFeb-02-2015 10:24 AM
โFeb-02-2015 05:55 AM
Adirondacker wrote:
I was wondering if you ever tried to remove and reseat the inner spring-loaded pin from inside the valve stem.
Sometimes a little dirt or gum gets wedged in there while filling up the tires. By using a valve stem tool, you can unscrew the inner workings of the valve stem, view it, resecure it tightly, and refill it.
It has happened to me a few times on different car and bicycle tires. A three dollar valve stem tool saved me several times... You simply insert it into the stem and unscrew the spring loaded pin valve mechanism. Clean it up and re install it..
Any of the autoparts chains or Walmart will have them.
Edit: here is a Video Clip for the tool.