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#1
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Weird Tire valve problem
Last night I was away from home and noticed I had a tire that was low on
air. I went to the nearest gas station and added air. Thats when I noticed the air was coming back out of the tire valve on the stem. I suspeced a loose valve, but had no tool for that with me. Being only 5 miles from home, I overfilled the tire by about 10lbs put on the cap (which slowed down the leak), and drove home without any problem. Once home, I got out my valve tool and tightened it. That did not solve the problem. I went out to the shed where I have several usable tires that I plan to sell at the next rummage sale because they dont fit any of my vehicles. I removed a valve and placed it into the leaky tire. I was sure this would solve the problem. It didn't. The tire still leaks at the valve. So I went and took out yet another valve, and changed it again. The sucker still leaks....... I'm confused. The air is leaking from the valve. Not from the stem, such as around the rim, or a crack in the stem. Putting the cap on the stem slows down the leak considerably, so that alone proves 100% that the leak is the valve, and not anywhere on the stem. Yet, three different valves and it's still leaking. Both those valves came from tires that were holding air. How can this be? Over the years I've had tires that had either loose valves, or bad valves. If tightening the valve did not fix the leak, a valve from another tire always did. This is making no sense at all..... Yea, tomorrow I'll take it to the tire shop, but this has me puzzled.... (Since this happened on Halloween, I can only suspect ghosts, because this just makes no sense at all otherwise).... |
#2
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Weird Tire valve problem
I agree. That would puzzle me, also. Please let us know if the tire shop can
give you any answers. I'm guessing they will break it down, replace the valve stem, and then the "evidence" goes in the trash. The question will remain unanswered. Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message ... Last night I was away from home and noticed I had a tire that was low on air. I went to the nearest gas station and added air. Thats when I noticed the air was coming back out of the tire valve on the stem. I suspeced a loose valve, but had no tool for that with me. Being only 5 miles from home, I overfilled the tire by about 10lbs put on the cap (which slowed down the leak), and drove home without any problem. Once home, I got out my valve tool and tightened it. That did not solve the problem. I went out to the shed where I have several usable tires that I plan to sell at the next rummage sale because they dont fit any of my vehicles. I removed a valve and placed it into the leaky tire. I was sure this would solve the problem. It didn't. The tire still leaks at the valve. So I went and took out yet another valve, and changed it again. The sucker still leaks....... I'm confused. The air is leaking from the valve. Not from the stem, such as around the rim, or a crack in the stem. Putting the cap on the stem slows down the leak considerably, so that alone proves 100% that the leak is the valve, and not anywhere on the stem. Yet, three different valves and it's still leaking. Both those valves came from tires that were holding air. How can this be? Over the years I've had tires that had either loose valves, or bad valves. If tightening the valve did not fix the leak, a valve from another tire always did. This is making no sense at all..... Yea, tomorrow I'll take it to the tire shop, but this has me puzzled.... (Since this happened on Halloween, I can only suspect ghosts, because this just makes no sense at all otherwise).... |
#3
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Weird Tire valve problem
On Thu, 1 Nov 2012 07:31:29 -0400, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: I agree. That would puzzle me, also. Please let us know if the tire shop can give you any answers. I'm guessing they will break it down, replace the valve stem, and then the "evidence" goes in the trash. The question will remain unanswered. Christopher A. Young It's not unanswered. The tire shop said I had a very rare problem. The brass part of the stem is molded into the rubber part. The brass part became loose in the rubber part. The guy took a plyers and pulled the brass part right out of the rubber part, just to show me. I was thankful he took the time to show me. He said he's seen it before, but very seldom. It's just one of those rare things that can happen. When I asked what caused it, he said it could have been molded poorly, jarred somehow, or just fatigue from age. I could see that they were not joking about the rarity of the problem, because the young guy who began the repair had to get the boss. The boss was the one who told me what happened and pulled the brass part out. He said he might see this problem once or twice a year at most. The young guy said that was the first time he's ever seen it. I also learned that the brass part goes all the way to the end of the stem inside of the tire. I always thought it was just on the tip. He replaced the stem, and 10 minutes later I was on my way. Total cost was $8.50 plus tax. I thought that was a fair price, and excellent service. -------- . wrote in message .. . Last night I was away from home and noticed I had a tire that was low on air. I went to the nearest gas station and added air. Thats when I noticed the air was coming back out of the tire valve on the stem. I suspeced a loose valve, but had no tool for that with me. Being only 5 miles from home, I overfilled the tire by about 10lbs put on the cap (which slowed down the leak), and drove home without any problem. Once home, I got out my valve tool and tightened it. That did not solve the problem. I went out to the shed where I have several usable tires that I plan to sell at the next rummage sale because they dont fit any of my vehicles. I removed a valve and placed it into the leaky tire. I was sure this would solve the problem. It didn't. The tire still leaks at the valve. So I went and took out yet another valve, and changed it again. The sucker still leaks....... I'm confused. The air is leaking from the valve. Not from the stem, such as around the rim, or a crack in the stem. Putting the cap on the stem slows down the leak considerably, so that alone proves 100% that the leak is the valve, and not anywhere on the stem. Yet, three different valves and it's still leaking. Both those valves came from tires that were holding air. How can this be? Over the years I've had tires that had either loose valves, or bad valves. If tightening the valve did not fix the leak, a valve from another tire always did. This is making no sense at all..... Yea, tomorrow I'll take it to the tire shop, but this has me puzzled.... (Since this happened on Halloween, I can only suspect ghosts, because this just makes no sense at all otherwise).... |
#4
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Weird Tire valve problem
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#5
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Weird Tire valve problem
years ago i got married and used my new wifes vehicle one day, the
tire went flat the next day and she blamed me that car had many flats and one day i asked the tiree shop whats up? the flats tended to occur when cold weather hit...... the problem aluninum wheels, the alunimum would actually rust, as a white powder at the bead which caused the leak.. so i bought 4 used steel wheels and 4 new tires, and the problem ended till the vehicle got scrapped |
#7
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Weird Tire valve problem
Thanks, I've never seen that. Something else to
know, for such moments. Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message ... The tire shop said I had a very rare problem. The brass part of the stem is molded into the rubber part. The brass part became loose in the rubber part. The guy took a plyers and pulled the brass part right out of the rubber part, just to show me. I was thankful he took the time to show me. He said he's seen it before, but very seldom. It's just one of those rare things that can happen. When I asked what caused it, he said it could have been molded poorly, jarred somehow, or just fatigue from age. I could see that they were not joking about the rarity of the problem, because the young guy who began the repair had to get the boss. The boss was the one who told me what happened and pulled the brass part out. He said he might see this problem once or twice a year at most. The young guy said that was the first time he's ever seen it. I also learned that the brass part goes all the way to the end of the stem inside of the tire. I always thought it was just on the tip. He replaced the stem, and 10 minutes later I was on my way. Total cost was $8.50 plus tax. I thought that was a fair price, and excellent service. |
#8
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Weird Tire valve problem
wrote in message ... It's not unanswered. The tire shop said I had a very rare problem. The brass part of the stem is molded into the rubber part. The brass part became loose in the rubber part. The guy took a plyers and pulled the brass part right out of the rubber part, just to show me. I was thankful he took the time to show me. He said he's seen it before, but very seldom. It's just one of those rare things that can happen. When I asked what caused it, he said it could have been molded poorly, jarred somehow, or just fatigue from age. Probably just a rare problem. For only a couple of dollars, it is not worth fooling with, just get a new one when you have problems. I read all the time about tires going bad just sitting on the dealers shelves. A assume that the steams could go bad just sitting around. One of the first part time jobs I had over 40 years ago was changing tires. Was told then to replace all the valve steams when changing the tires. Boss said no use in having problems to come back for as little as they cost him. |
#9
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Weird Tire valve problem
On Nov 1, 1:30*am, wrote:
Last night I was away from home and noticed I had a tire that was low on air. *I went to the nearest gas station and added air. *Thats when I noticed the air was coming back out of the tire valve on the stem. *I suspeced a loose valve, but had no tool for that with me. *Being only 5 miles from home, I overfilled the tire by about 10lbs put on the cap (which slowed down the leak), and drove home without any problem. *Once home, I got out my valve tool and tightened it. *That did not solve the problem. *I went out to the shed where I have several usable tires that I plan to sell at the next rummage sale because they dont fit any of my vehicles. *I removed a valve and placed it into the leaky tire. *I was sure this would solve the problem. *It didn't. *The tire still leaks at the valve. *So I went and took out yet another valve, and changed it again. *The sucker still leaks....... I'm confused. *The air is leaking from the valve. *Not from the stem, such as around the rim, or a crack in the stem. *Putting the cap on the stem slows down the leak considerably, so that alone proves 100% that the leak is the valve, and not anywhere on the stem. Yet, three different valves and it's still leaking. *Both those valves came from tires that were holding air. How can this be? Over the years I've had tires that had either loose valves, or bad valves. *If tightening the valve did not fix the leak, a valve from another tire always did. This is making no sense at all..... Yea, tomorrow I'll take it to the tire shop, but this has me puzzled.... (Since this happened on Halloween, I can only suspect ghosts, because this just makes no sense at all otherwise).... Simple answer: The valve stem is damaged. Not a nuclear science problem. Harry K |
#10
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Weird Tire valve problem
"Harry K" wrote in message ... Simple answer: The valve stem is damaged. Not a nuclear science problem. Harry K It may be time for a new one from the store. |
#11
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Weird Tire valve problem
On 11/1/2012 9:32 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Harry K" wrote in message ... Simple answer: The valve stem is damaged. Not a nuclear science problem. Harry K It may be time for a new one from the store. Most tire valve 4-way tools have a thread chaser and reamer that could fix the valve stem so the core will seal. It's possible that it's a bur or piece of trash stuck in the threads of the valve stem. ^_^ TDD |
#12
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Weird Tire valve problem
On Thu, 01 Nov 2012 13:33:26 -0500, The Daring Dufas
wrote: Most tire valve 4-way tools have a thread chaser and reamer that could fix the valve stem so the core will seal. It's possible that it's a bur or piece of trash stuck in the threads of the valve stem. ^_^ If the core is not bent or cross threaded. |
#13
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Weird Tire valve problem
On Nov 1, 4:57*pm, Oren wrote:
On Thu, 01 Nov 2012 13:33:26 -0500, The Daring Dufas wrote: Most tire valve 4-way tools have a thread chaser and reamer that could fix the valve stem so the core will seal. It's possible that it's a bur or piece of trash stuck in the threads of the valve stem. ^_^ If the core is not bent or cross threaded. In any case the damage is immaterial except as a cause. Don't even fool with it, take it to atire shop and get the valve stem replaced. Not worth fooling with. Harry K |
#14
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Weird Tire valve problem
"The Daring Dufas" wrote in message ... On 11/1/2012 9:32 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote: "Harry K" wrote in message ... Simple answer: The valve stem is damaged. Not a nuclear science problem. Harry K It may be time for a new one from the store. Most tire valve 4-way tools have a thread chaser and reamer that could fix the valve stem so the core will seal. It's possible that it's a bur or piece of trash stuck in the threads of the valve stem. ^_^ TDD A must have item for any glove box. Steve |
#15
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Weird Tire valve problem
In article ,
wrote: Last night I was away from home and noticed I had a tire that was low on air. I went to the nearest gas station and added air. Thats when I noticed the air was coming back out of the tire valve on the stem. I suspeced a loose valve, but had no tool for that with me. Being only 5 miles from home, I overfilled the tire by about 10lbs put on the cap (which slowed down the leak), and drove home without any problem. Once home, I got out my valve tool and tightened it. That did not solve the problem. I went out to the shed where I have several usable tires that I plan to sell at the next rummage sale because they dont fit any of my vehicles. I removed a valve and placed it into the leaky tire. I was sure this would solve the problem. It didn't. The tire still leaks at the valve. So I went and took out yet another valve, and changed it again. The sucker still leaks....... I'm confused. The air is leaking from the valve. Not from the stem, such as around the rim, or a crack in the stem. Putting the cap on the stem slows down the leak considerably, so that alone proves 100% that the leak is the valve, and not anywhere on the stem. Yet, three different valves and it's still leaking. Both those valves came from tires that were holding air. How can this be? Over the years I've had tires that had either loose valves, or bad valves. If tightening the valve did not fix the leak, a valve from another tire always did. This is making no sense at all..... Yea, tomorrow I'll take it to the tire shop, but this has me puzzled.... (Since this happened on Halloween, I can only suspect ghosts, because this just makes no sense at all otherwise).... Yea, replace the stem... or as another poster mentioned, you might try chasing the threads. Hope it's not a TPMS stem... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tire_pr...itoring_system Erik |
#16
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Weird Tire valve problem
"Erik" wrote in message ... Hope it's not a TPMS stem... I have a 2007 truck that the TPMS went bad in one tire. They wanted about $ 60 to replace it. I asked if it would pass the state's safety inspection and was told it would (it did) without it. That price seems way out of line for what it does compaired to much of the other electronic items on todays market that are mass produced. I may have payed $ 15 to get it replaced. So now I just ride around with the light on the dash. |
#17
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Weird Tire valve problem
On 11/2/2012 9:36 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Erik" wrote in message ... Hope it's not a TPMS stem... I have a 2007 truck that the TPMS went bad in one tire. They wanted about $ 60 to replace it. I asked if it would pass the state's safety inspection and was told it would (it did) without it. That price seems way out of line for what it does compaired to much of the other electronic items on todays market that are mass produced. I may have payed $ 15 to get it replaced. So now I just ride around with the light on the dash. A piece of black electrical tape will fix the light. ^_^ TDD |
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