Missourian
Diamond Member
...at home without special tools...
(Assuming you have an air compressor...but I doubt you'd try anything tire related without one)
The back tire on the pickup had a slow leak so I pulled it off and sprayed it with soapy water to find the leak...and...unfortunately it was leaking from the inside bead.
The bead needs broken and the inside of the rim requires cleaning and then reset the bead.
No sweat.
I don't have a bead breaker...but I do have a landscape timber and another vehicle...the wife's buick.
You can use a 4x4 ... And I have many times...but the landscape timber has rounded edges.
Put the edge of the timber as close to the edge of rim as possible. Then drive a tire up the timber.
I usually do this with the pickup and forego the stop-block...but the wife's buick doesn't have the clearance and has a lot of plastic/fiberglass back there...so caution is the order of the day.
Ran up on this one once and it rolled down but didn't quite release...pulled off and gave the rim a quarter turn...reset the timber and voila...ready for clean up...
(Assuming you have an air compressor...but I doubt you'd try anything tire related without one)
The back tire on the pickup had a slow leak so I pulled it off and sprayed it with soapy water to find the leak...and...unfortunately it was leaking from the inside bead.
The bead needs broken and the inside of the rim requires cleaning and then reset the bead.
No sweat.
I don't have a bead breaker...but I do have a landscape timber and another vehicle...the wife's buick.
You can use a 4x4 ... And I have many times...but the landscape timber has rounded edges.
Put the edge of the timber as close to the edge of rim as possible. Then drive a tire up the timber.
I usually do this with the pickup and forego the stop-block...but the wife's buick doesn't have the clearance and has a lot of plastic/fiberglass back there...so caution is the order of the day.
Ran up on this one once and it rolled down but didn't quite release...pulled off and gave the rim a quarter turn...reset the timber and voila...ready for clean up...