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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Montgomery, AL
Posts: 689
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Who needs a spare tire if you have WD40 around?
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Steve B. 1972 911t 1999 328is |
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I'd sooner think he used starting fluid.
That's what we used to use when seating big (semi) truck tires.
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Pete 79 911SC RoW "Tornadoes come out of frikkin nowhere. One minute everything is all sunshine and puppies the next thing you know you've got flying cows".- Stomachmonkey |
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Member 911 Anonymous
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Whoa, that's crazy shiznet
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'85 Carrera Targa Factory Marble Grey/Black * Turbo Tail * 930 Steering Wheel* Sport Seats * 17" Fuchs (r) * 3.4 * 964 Cams * 915 * LSD * Factory SS * Turbo Tie Rods * Bilsteins * Euro Pre-Muff * SW Chip on 4K DME * NGK * Sienes GSK * Targa Body Brace PCA/POC |
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Registered
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: CA
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alright, so we should keep a can of wd40 in the car all the time?
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Fat butt 911, 1987 |
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Member 911 Anonymous
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Only if you have a spare regular tire, but how do you press the tires on the rim?
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'85 Carrera Targa Factory Marble Grey/Black * Turbo Tail * 930 Steering Wheel* Sport Seats * 17" Fuchs (r) * 3.4 * 964 Cams * 915 * LSD * Factory SS * Turbo Tie Rods * Bilsteins * Euro Pre-Muff * SW Chip on 4K DME * NGK * Sienes GSK * Targa Body Brace PCA/POC |
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Montgomery, AL
Posts: 689
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Granted it doesn't patch the hole but pretty amazing way to inflate the tire.
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Steve B. 1972 911t 1999 328is |
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Designer King
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Toronto, ON Canada
Posts: 5,499
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Hold my beer and watch this...
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Paul Yellow 77 Sunroof Coupe/cork interior; 3.2L SS '80 engine/10.3:1/No O2; Carrera Tensioners; 11 Blade Fan; Turbo tie rods; Bilstein B6; 28 tube Cooler; SSI, Dansk; MSD/Blaster; 16x7" Fuchs/205/50 Firestone Firehawk Indy 500s; PCA/UCR, MID9 Never leave well enough alone |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.
Posts: 21,179
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Inflating large tires is dangerous enough with air, no reason to add pyrotechnics to the mix:
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, USA
Posts: 4,499
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I don't get it. What good does that do if you get a leak big enough that your tire comes off the bead? All you do is re-fit the useless tire to the bead. Might as well leave it where it was, at least you've accomplished step one of a tire repair.
I suppose it's useful for serious off-roaders like the people in the video, who run tires at five and 10 psi and occasionally knock them loose from the beads, but that's about it.
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Stephan Wilkinson '83 911SC Gold-Plated Porsche '04 replacement Boxster |
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KCTarga
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Never done this, but have heard that this is a good trick for mounting the tire (setting the bead). However, I think you would still need some way of getting the tire up to the correct pressure. Also, I've read that there is a chance that the flammable liquid/gas will stay in the tire - just a warning for the next person that changes it.
Just You Tube "redneck tire mounting" - looks like most of them have inhaled more lighter fluid than used it to mount tires.
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84 Targa, Guards Red |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Ontario, California
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This method of mounting a tire is more previlant with off road tires and with dunebuggy paddle tires.
Since these tires are run at very low pressures, they will, on occasion, break loose from the bead. That's why more and more low pressure tires are mounted with bead locks. It's not WD 40 but engine starting spray commonly known as Ether that's used to cause the explosion and thus a rapid expansion of air inside the tire and forces the bead back onto the rim. I've done this a couple of times to get my dunebuggy paddle tires mounted back on the rim. The video of the guy that set the tire on fire probably used gasoline as the residue of the fuel was present on top of the tire.
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___________________________________________ 2001 Boxster S, Orient Red Current Vehicle, 1973.5 911 full factory "S" trim with a 3.2 engine **Sold**,2002 996 **Sold**,1975 911S **Sold**, 1971 911T **Sold**, 1968 912 **Sold** |
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Yup, like stated above, it's not WD40. I've tied it several times with WD and it just doesn't work. Gotta use something more combustible, like starting fluid.
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88' Carrera, Black/Black/Black, "Murdered Out" OEM. 06' BMW 'M' Roadster (Wife's car and WAY faster than mine) |
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Valencia Pa.
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I used to rent commercial space from a trucking company, and that is exactly how the seated the bead on every truck tire that they changed. I never did have the nads to try it myself, ( I have a tire machine) but I watched them do hundereds of tires like that. Brave men indeed
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No left turn un stoned |
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Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Sweden
Posts: 5,911
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Hmm...it seems to be slightly picky regarding the amount of WD40:
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Thank you for your time, |
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Bland
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Quote:
I have done this lots. It is good when you have a tire that had gone flat and is off the bead from sitting or whatever. Also, it you mount up your own tires (my dad has the bead breaker from my grandfather's garage from the 40s to 60s), sometimes this is the only way to set the bead on a narrower tire on wide rims or if you have had tires stacked for a while. On my Carerra parts car, I tried this several times on the right rear tire (and burned all the hair off of my hand) before I realized that the rim was cracked on the inside... The trick is to get compressed air in there before the hot air from the combustion cools off.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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Bland
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Oh, and always use starting fluid. Spray it into the tire then run a line out on the sidewall. Light the sidewall and stand back and wait for the 'WOOOF'.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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