It comes with a tin of goo and an air compressor, but luckily it went flat in the car port so gave us a few options (like the actual air compressor in the shed) instead of gumming up the rim with that stuff.
Yeah, the car that only drives on flat bitumen road to like shops and stuff… Well, except our driveway which is currently mud central. Looks like those redneck pools of mud they drive 4x4s through all day.
Meanwhile the vans go in to industrial sites, gutter hop a heap, and generally get driven with zero care for where the rubber is going and… actually get punctures at least once a year lol.
Originally I pulled the tyre off to get it fixed, but decided to do a temporary fix by… screwing in a larger screw! It’s reduced the leak to practically nothing so we’ll just pump it back up tomorrow morning and drive it to the tyre shop. Currently gone from 48psi to 45psi over 5 hours or so. Normally run it at 42psi.
Doh, got a flat tyre. Cars only done 15,000 but managed to find a screw somewhere.
Also guess which car doesn’t come with a spare or a jack?
Do they give a can of finilec or equivalent at least with the car?
It comes with a tin of goo and an air compressor, but luckily it went flat in the car port so gave us a few options (like the actual air compressor in the shed) instead of gumming up the rim with that stuff.
Is it the BYD Seal?
Also, damn screw. I haven’t gotten a flat tyre from a screw before, only from potholes. That one went off with a bang.
Yeah, the car that only drives on flat bitumen road to like shops and stuff… Well, except our driveway which is currently mud central. Looks like those redneck pools of mud they drive 4x4s through all day.
Meanwhile the vans go in to industrial sites, gutter hop a heap, and generally get driven with zero care for where the rubber is going and… actually get punctures at least once a year lol.
Originally I pulled the tyre off to get it fixed, but decided to do a temporary fix by… screwing in a larger screw! It’s reduced the leak to practically nothing so we’ll just pump it back up tomorrow morning and drive it to the tyre shop. Currently gone from 48psi to 45psi over 5 hours or so. Normally run it at 42psi.
The scene:
The culprit:
Mr. MacGyver right here.