black dawg
WKR
Got a flat one night about 13 miles in and no spare. Peeled the tire off the wheel with a stick and a screwdriver and drove out slowly. ROUGH ride and ruined wheel, but didnt have to walk......
I worry though that if i have to fill up a full size all terrain after patching I might over cook the compressor I have so make sure it's capable. I'm going to carry a full size compact bike pump as a backup. I used to carry one in my atv and I was glad I did when I had to let out all the air to patch flatsI always carry a little air compressor with me to air up a neglected spare or limp a slow leaker back to society.
Knock on wood but as soon as I ditched the B/F Goodrich Rugged Trails my Tacoma came with I switched to Michelin LTX Defender and I haven't had a flat. That's two sets of tires, probably 130k combined. Now on the B/F Goodrich K02's and expect the same.
I haven't looked at run times. My crappy one isn't rated for truck tires but also allegedly has a thermal shutoff feature. I'm probably using it outside the published specifications. Certainly a consideration.I worry though that if i have to fill up a full size all terrain after patching I might over cook the compressor I have so make sure it's capable. I'm going to carry a full size compact bike pump as a backup. I used to carry one in my atv and I was glad I did when I had to let out all the air to patch flats
Yea mine says to not run for a certain time continuously (8mins?) and it is slow so that got me thinking to have a bike pump just in case. Can only imagine how long itd take to get a 33in tire up to psi in the 40s with a small compressorI haven't looked at run times. My crappy one isn't rated for truck tires but also allegedly has a thermal shutoff feature. I'm probably using it outside the published specifications. Certainly a consideration.
This is a big one, this and an air compressor. It is not hard at all to plug a tire.-Plug kit
Expanding on this, wife and I got a flat on a USFS logging road in MT last Summer. Got super lucky that we had a spare in the rental we were driving. If you flew somewhere to hunt and are renting a car, do a quick check to make sure the spare is in the trunk or under the truck. Lots of times they take those out. And of course tow trucks won't leave the pavement, so you'll have to hope someone else will find you and have recovery equipment.I would also highly recommend checking your spare in addition to where your lug wrench is, lug key if needed and jack stand any time you rent a car, in or out of the United States. Two horror stories for ya
1) I was in in Belize about 20 years ago for a college class. The class finished early so a buddy and his wife and I decided to rent a car and drive to Guatemala to visit Tikal. I got us through the border checkpoint and that’s where pavement turned to rocky dirt roads. 30 miles into the jungle and we blew a tire. Had no idea where to find the lug wrench nor jack stand. After ripping the interior of the car apart we finally found it. Moved to the back to pull the spare tire off and as we dropped it on the ground you could hear water inside of the tire. A lot of water. With no other option we put it on and proceeded down the road. Within seconds the car started bouncing violently. The tire was warped. We decided at that point to turn around and go back to Belize. 25-30 mph hour the entire way back all the way across Belize. It took hours to get back. Terrible trip.
2). Costa Rica last year for spring break. Had the entire fam with me. Van loaded to the gills with luggage. Headed back from Arenal to the capital to catch our flight home. In the middle of a remote stretch of jungle road just starting a 5 mile descent and on a blind corner our tire blows out. There is no where to pull over. They don’t have shoulders. You get off the pavement and that van is rolling over it’s so steep. A gentleman behind me on a motorcycle pulls up next to me and I ask how far down till I can turn off. He said , it’s too far. Just park here. So on a blind steep turn I am parked. He grabs a pile of branches and piles them in the road up the hill behind us to notify traffic of a hazard. We pull out the lug wrench and jack stand and start to go to town. The lug wrench is the wrong size for the lug nuts. None of them fit. He flags down a random guy whose been driving since 3 am from Nicaragua who has what appeared to be an entire mechanic tool chest in the back of his van. He finds the right socket size and they get it changed. Wouldn’t let me help at all. I paid them handsomely and off we went.
Lesson is…….never never never rent a car or take your own car without knowing where the lug keys are, where the correct lug wrench is, where the jack stand is and what shape the spare is in.