Motoring Discussion > Puncture 21st Century style. Miscellaneous
Thread Author: R.P. Replies: 12

 Puncture 21st Century style. - R.P.
A puncture on a motorcycle is at best disabling at worst a serious accident waiting to happen. Went out for a spin today on the 1200GS - usual pre-flight checks passed muster and out I ventured into near perfect riding conditions. It started to go wrong around thirty miles into my trip - a rapidly flashing red-light on the dash, the computer's display switched from showing the time to a read out from the tyre pressure monitoring system, rear tyre had lost 0.5 bar from when I set off.....I slowed right down, and it was consistently losing 0.1 bar every few miles....I rolled into Betws Y Coed and parked it up in a car park by a cafe. A call to my Bank's recovery service brought an AA patrolman within less than thirty minutes - he managed to fish out a sliver of steel from a cut in the tyre and then inserted a plug into the tyre carcass..He then advised me to ride home at no more than 60mph - he followed me through the Ogwen valley's no signal zone and we parted company on the A5/A55 interchange - the rear tyre pumped to 2.8 bar (.5 more than standard running trim) and stayed steadfastly on that. Bikes garaged now, I'll need to order a new tyre and ride to a nearby bike shop to get it fixed. Guess I was lucky. Huge change from the old days where the first indication of a problem would have been a massive wallowing from the back end and a wheel off or recovery to fix the problem. Great service from bike and AA.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - ....
Don't talk to me about tyres, 530€ worth in September.
340€ for new front and rear on the bike then a puncture last week in my car.Two nails in a tyre. OK Mr. Tyreman how much to patch? Can't, the tyre already had two patches in it.
4mm tread left, this is why some people go to Motorpoint because a 5 billion point approved check is no guarantee that the tyres aren't full of patches eh! VolvoSelekt?
Last edited by: gmac on Sat 4 Oct 14 at 23:02
 Puncture 21st Century style. - R.P.
My rear one is 7k old and good for another 7 at least...well it was...won't ride on a patched tyre...
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Simon
As long as a bike tyre is repaired properly I don't see a problem in using them. I've been to the Nurburgring 3 times with my bike, definitely at least once with a repaired rear Z rated tyre, if not more than once. Very rarely do I wear a rear tyre out without getting a puncture/repair in it. Oh and I'm lucky to see 3500-4000 miles out of a rear. I've never had a repair fail yet and I give my tyres some stick.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Mapmaker
>>As long as a bike tyre is repaired properly I don't see a problem in using them.


If you can afford it, why risk it? It's different on a car.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - ....
I wouldn't be happy with a plugged tyre on my bike.

Bike tyres are like car tyres for wear depending on what rubber you go for.
I got 9000 miles out of a Metzeler Roadtec Z6 on a CBR600 and only 3200 out of a Bridgestone BT16 on a GSXR 750 which included 1000 miles running in.

Switched to Michelin Pilot Power3 really feel the difference, it'll be interesting to see how long they last on the Suzuki.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Robin O'Reliant
These self repair kits you get with BMWs come with instructions on UK bikes that they are only a temporary get you home measure, but I believe elsewhere in the world they are fix and forget.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Slidingpillar
I'll cough to carrying an aerosol of tyre goo on the vintage car. But it's not got a spare as front and back wheels are different and I'm not up to a tube swap by the side of the road.

I view the goo as a get to place of safety measure, which is not always as far as home. I'd chance it with a front tyre perhaps, but never a rear.

But, as I'm always using tubes, junking one of those is cheaper than a tyre.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Simon
I still think that you are all being a bit too cautious. Its not about how much a replacement tyre costs, its about rational and sensible thought for me.

Over the years I have had punctures and blowouts on motorcycles, cars, vans and trucks. The most memorable two being a front tyre delaminating on a truck on the M5, now that was an experience. I have had a tyre go flat very rapidly on a new Aprilia motorcycle and got the rear end wobbly feeling round the bends. My point being that out of all of the flat tyres I have experienced I have never had a repair fail, it has always been an object in the road that has been picked up apart from the delamination incident.

A proper vulcanised mushroom plug repair is 100% fine in my book, where as these bungs that you fit without removing the tyre are only a temporary measure.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Bromptonaut
>> A proper vulcanised mushroom plug repair is 100% fine in my book, where as these
>> bungs that you fit without removing the tyre are only a temporary measure.

I'm ignorant of motorcycles but not the slightest reservation about the 2 mushroom plugs in O/S rear tyre of the newer 'lingo.

Should I be worried?
 Puncture 21st Century style. - bathtub tom
Having had a sudden rear tyre deflation on a motorcycle, I can fully appreciate RP's caution.

I recall choosing between aiming for the central reservation or the nearside lamp-posts and trees, whilst trying to regain control of the 'bike. Fortunately, I didn't have to make the decision, as the following vehicles gave me space whilst I crabbed all over the dual carriageway.

There's no comparison to a car tyre puncture!
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Simon
That's what I'm saying, you can get a sudden puncture at any point. The chance of it being a previous repair that has failed I would think is very much less likely than running over something lying on the road surface.
 Puncture 21st Century style. - Mapmaker
>>I'm ignorant of motorcycles but not the slightest reservation about the 2 mushroom plugs in
>>O/S rear tyre of the newer 'lingo.

The very unlikely expectation of a blowout on a motorcar that would be of no real significance anyway = "not the slightest reservation".

A blowout on a motorbike is just a bit too scary (I'd imagine; I've never been on one and have no desire ever to. Which perhaps indicates my attitude to risk.)

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