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First Flat
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GoldOxide_imp Offline
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RE: First Flat
#11

(07-11-2019, 09:33 AM)The ferret_imp Wrote: Man the number of flats I've had on the road over the years. Always carry a tire plugging kit when on the road. Usually throw a plug in it and go on. If it's holding air a day later I keep running on the plug. I've put 9,000 miles on a plugged tire.

Glad you got it taken care of without too much drama Sea.

(1 + 1) Thumbs Up

If using the corded-type plugs, a decent trick is to light the cut end with a lighter to "vulcanize" it to the tire puncture. Never had one fail - just left it in forever.

Really, smooth running story MTC.


07-11-2019, 12:39 PM
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the Ferret Offline
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RE: First Flat
#12

(07-11-2019, 10:15 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: Glad you're okay sounds like that was a scary feeling.

Makes me want to get the little compressor patch kit I've been looking at.

What are people using to replace those PR 3s mine will be due soon?

offroad..you just rode 5,000 miles across the country and back without a tire patch kit?


07-11-2019, 12:46 PM
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Stichill_imp Offline
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RE: First Flat
#13

I enjoyed the story and photos, Sea. It's not about the flat and what kind of repair is best, etc. It's about the the silver lining to having bike trouble on the road...you come away with memories and a story. And isn't that what riding is all about?

By the way, it's awesome that you rode your bike on a business trip! Major cred! Thumbs Up


07-11-2019, 12:59 PM
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pdedse Offline
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RE: First Flat
#14

Glad to hear your flat repair went about as well as it could have gone. I was in a remote part of Costa Rica a few years back riding my Honda CGL125, when the rear went flat due to a nail, which destroyed the tube, leaving no hope for a roadside repair. I wasn't carrying a spare tube, but within 5 minutes of stopping for the flat, a pickup stops and 3 guys ask if I need help--they load my bike into the back, drive me 30 some minutres back to a tiny town and shop that has tubes and they had me back on the road pretty quick. The PU guys wouldn't take a dime, the tube cost $4 and labor was $3.

Sometimes it just works out.


07-11-2019, 12:59 PM
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GoldOxide_imp Offline
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RE: First Flat
#15

That is a great story too pdedse.


07-11-2019, 01:06 PM
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Cormanus Offline
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RE: First Flat
#16

Heartening stories MTC and pdedse. I have nothing to add that relates to tyres, punctures, or, indeed, motorcycles. However, a very long time ago, I worked as a sub editor for a parliamentary reporting service. I remember well a member of the upper house who had worked in the insurance industry describing an actuary as "... a bloke who, if he stood with his right foot in a bucket of ice and his left foot in a bucket of boiling water, would tell you his bum ought to be the right temperature — according to the averages."


07-11-2019, 07:03 PM
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LongRanger_imp Offline
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RE: First Flat
#17

Mine was a broken alternator belt on a rented BMW boxer in the middle of the Dolomites. It cost me a day of touring but the local experiences I enjoyed while waiting for the bike to be towed and repaired was priceless. I'll never forget that day.
Offroad, I agree with Ferret's inquiry. I don't venture 30 minutes from my house without tire repair provisions!


07-12-2019, 01:29 AM
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KiowaEagle_imp Offline
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RE: First Flat
#18

(07-11-2019, 10:15 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: Glad you're okay sounds like that was a scary feeling.

Makes me want to get the little compressor patch kit I've been looking at.

What are people using to replace those PR 3s mine will be due soon?

+1 Thumbs Up


07-12-2019, 04:32 AM
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flynrider Offline
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RE: First Flat
#19

(07-11-2019, 08:19 AM)EmptySea_imp Wrote: I'm in Erie, PA this week for a series of meetings with Erie Insurance. Tuesday's event (building a home for Habitat for Humanity) was canceled which left me with a free day to explore the shores of Lake Erie. I headed out around 9:30 am after having breakfast with a friend of mine from the Chicago area who just happened to be staying in the same hotel and who also had meeting with Erie this week. He's an actuary, though, so he had nerdy, intellectual, meetings probably of much greater import than my meetings. My planned route was supposed to take me east into New York where I would wander around for a couple hundred miles before returning for a 4:00 cocktail reception and dinner.

Route 5 clings fairly tightly to the lake shore all through Pennsylvania and it's a delightful 2-lane motorcycle road. Direct, but not straight. Light traffic (except through Erie) and nice views of Lake Erie on one side and vineyards on the other. If you're traveling through the area, I recommend it over the interstate or other US highways that bypass the city.

[Image: c1a7dd586af1c11bf7ef107c40b3ea83.jpg]

About 20 miles out from "home", I spotted a guy and his ST1300 on the side of the road. I slowed and he signaled that he was 'OK'. I continued on into New York State.

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I came upon a blue Dodge minivan of the 1990s variety putzing along at below the posted speed limit of 55 and well below my internal speed limit of 65. As luck would have it, I came upon him at speed and at a perfect place to pass safely. Naturally, I accelerated into the opposing lane to execute the pass and it was then that the rear tire slid out. Not much, thankfully, but enough to startle me. It felt a little like a patch of ice but there was no ice and, an ice patch, I couldn't ride away from it. Telling the story takes much longer than the actual event. I was too far into the pass to let up, so I finished it then pulled immediately on to the shoulder. I'm sure the driver in the minivan thought I was a jerk.

I had noticed odd handling earlier in the ride, but I thought I had just squared off my aging Michelins on the mostly flat trip from Chicago. I knew before my bike had stopped that the rear tire was flat, though. I have never had a flat on the road before. I think my dealer found a screw in my stock tire once when they were replacing it with the PR3s, but I hadn't noticed it and it was still holding air. This was going to be an adventure, I thought. I'm 600 miles from home in a town about which I know nothing really. I have tire repair kit so I figured I was going to learn how to use it.

Just about the time I had unloaded the bike, Curt stopped his ST1300 in front of my bike and offered his assistance. He's from the area and was riding around on his day off. My luck under the circumstances could not have been better. Not only did he have experience fixing a flat, but he had a friend who owns a campground about 1/2 mile from us who had a compressor to fill the tire to proper pressure. Then, after getting me back to riding condition, he suggested that I ride to Forest Park Honda in Erie to have it patched correctly or replaced if needed. I agreed and asked him for directions, but he insisted on riding with me the 25 miles in the opposite direction to the dealer to make sure I arrived safely and to introduce me to John the service guy.

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John was working on the front end of an ATV, but stopped to look at the damage, give me the usual warnings that it's probably better to get a new tire, but that he doesn't have one stocked and that it would take an hour or so and $100 to patch. I agreed to his terms. Curt, who was late for lunch with his wife, said goodbye and refused my repeated offers to buy him and his wife lunch in exchange for his help.

I went to a new BBQ place for lunch ("new" because John said he hadn't been there yet). I returned to a repaired bike and John's confident assurance that the patch would hold up to 100mph and to ride as normal provided, of course, that my "normal" was less than 100mph.

[Image: 504ab15f8a2a97a6ad7758b9ca21eee1.jpg]

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The acid test will be tomorrow's ride home. So far, though, I could not have scripted a better first flat tire experience.

P.S. As I don't think PR3s are available anymore, what should I use as replacements?

Rocky Mountain ATV and Cycle's website says they have 5 rear and 5+ front PR3s. https://www.rockymountainatvmc.com/searc...lot+road+3

I'll be replacing my rear PR3 sometime in the fall, with the front following soon after. If I can't find the PR3s, I'll probably go with the Bridgestone BT-45s in the stock sizes. I've run through 3 sets of them on the CB750 which is similar in weight and configuration to the CB1100. They've proved to be long lasting and plenty sticky in the curves, much like the PR3s. They're bias ply tires, but I doubt I'll notice the difference. The bonus is that you can get a set for around $100 less than the PR3s.


07-12-2019, 04:17 PM
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max Offline
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RE: First Flat
#20

Once upon a time i had a soft car tyre, a small nail had sneaked into the rear wheel, i looked at it for a while and wondered ( as i do ) "what if i fill the hole with a woodscrew?".
So i put some silicone on a small countersunk screw and drove it in the tyre, that was two years ago and i use the same tyre and car all the time...........

I now carry some countersunk small screws, they don't take up a lot of space and if required are probably the fastest and easiest way to keep the air inside at least for a while, i will see if i can make a picture of the tyre involved.
EDIT;

here we go;



07-13-2019, 02:38 PM
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