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Spare Wheel
has anyone ditched their heavy spare wheel for a repair outfit that seem to be the norm in new cars ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't even think about it. There are situations where a repair outfit will not work (sidewall damage, large hole etc) and then you are totally stuck. I had a puncture in France which wrecked the tyre, the nearest tyre dealer was 40 miles away and it took them 2 days to get me a tyre; without a spare, albeit a temporary spare, I would have been lumbered.
Is it possible to have both a spare wheel and one of those injection repair outfits in your car? I'm thinking that you might have a puncture on a dark, country road on a rainy night. You can't see where to place the jack, and you can't read the handbook properly, and getting down on your knees is killing you. A quick squirt
with one of those injection things, and you're away. If conditions are better, a change of wheel is the best way to fix the problem.
with one of those injection things, and you're away. If conditions are better, a change of wheel is the best way to fix the problem.
There's no reason at all why you can't have both; I do. This came about by accident as I ordered my car with a spare (as a no-cost option) but it was delivered with a repair kit. I complained and was given a spare wheel and jack. I have no intention of ever using the kit partly because it makes the type unrepairable.
You can buy blow-up kits from stores such as Halfords but remember that you will also need a pump and it might not work.
You can buy blow-up kits from stores such as Halfords but remember that you will also need a pump and it might not work.
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