I take it this tyre is FUBAR?
I take it this tyre is FUBAR?
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Scrubs

Original Poster:

977 posts

228 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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Got a feeling I picked this up from doing a tip run last night.

Not losing any air. I take it that I can expect a nice gush of wind though if I attempt to remove it?



GeniusOfLove

4,795 posts

36 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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You have to ask?! hehe

Simon_GH

863 posts

104 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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There’s a chance it’s only in the curb protection part of the tyre but I’d keep an eye on the sidewall if you continuing using the tyre in case it starts to bulge.

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,774 posts

67 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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Naturally a very new tyre too, never happens to an old one that needs replacing!

Radec

5,406 posts

71 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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Take it to Kwik Fit for a laugh

Scrubs

Original Poster:

977 posts

228 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
quotequote all
Radec said:
Take it to Kwik Fit for a laugh
Funnily enough they are working out the cheapest for that tyre at £330 quid fitted.

Annoyingly the car is only 5 months old.

GreenV8S

30,999 posts

308 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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If you have a spare, I'd fit that now and use it to get the wheel to a tyre shop.

If you don't have a spare and need to drive on this wheel to get it repaired, I'd take the screw out before that - and drive as though the tyre could go flat at any moment. This avoids the risk of the screw doing any further damage as the tyre flexes.

I wouldn't expect you to get a leak when you remove the screw. If the screw had gone the whole way through the tyre it would already be leaking. But the scructure of the tyre has obviously been compromised and it isn't safe to continue using that tyre as it is.

Scrubs

Original Poster:

977 posts

228 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
quotequote all
GreenV8S said:
If you have a spare, I'd fit that now and use it to get the wheel to a tyre shop.

If you don't have a spare and need to drive on this wheel to get it repaired, I'd take the screw out before that - and drive as though the tyre could go flat at any moment. This avoids the risk of the screw doing any further damage as the tyre flexes.

I wouldn't expect you to get a leak when you remove the screw. If the screw had gone the whole way through the tyre it would already be leaking. But the scructure of the tyre has obviously been compromised and it isn't safe to continue using that tyre as it is.
Cheers for this advice. Don't have a spare but decided to try and remove it. I slowly turned it with a pair of pliers for 30 seconds and that's it now removed with no air leak. The screw itself is pretty long as can be seen from the pic, but wasn't that thick so has just been through the outside rubber. Will keep an eye on it and get it looked at.

rallye101

2,517 posts

221 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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Yeeeaaaahhhh.......fu£ked

CoolHands

22,324 posts

219 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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Radec said:
Take it to Kwik Fit for a laugh
4 new tyres + a new exhaust

cerb4.5lee

41,736 posts

204 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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CoolHands said:
Radec said:
Take it to Kwik Fit for a laugh
4 new tyres + a new exhaust
hehe

I'm not sure where the exhaust is going on a Tesla though?! biggrin

SAS Tom

3,728 posts

198 months

Thursday 20th March 2025
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I’d replace the car. Just in case.

stevieturbo

17,968 posts

271 months

Friday 21st March 2025
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That's quite an impressive one really.

paul_c123

1,901 posts

17 months

Friday 21st March 2025
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Not necessarily. Unless the tyre is damaged to the extent the cords are exposed (either clearly visibly, or by exposing the damaged area with a blunt tool); or there is a bulge, it would pass an MoT (probably earn an advisory). You could superglue the flaps to avoid further damage.

DickyC

56,969 posts

222 months

Friday 21st March 2025
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Plus Superglue for any raggedy bits as mentioned above. If a dealer I drove for had a car going out with an iffy tyre, he would put jn a can of squirt. In the two years I was there, none came back under complaint. (Clarification - plenty of cars came back under complaint, none tyre foam related.)

It was so effective, I do it on my own cars now. If in doubt, buy a can of tyre weld.

It has to be worth a tenner as an experiment.

bimsb6

8,613 posts

245 months

Sunday 30th March 2025
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The screw looks useable .

P2KKA

331 posts

84 months

Wednesday 9th April 2025
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I would back out the screw and forget about it personally. But my cars aren't nearly as heavy as a Tesla..

Easternlight

3,829 posts

168 months

Wednesday 9th April 2025
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bimsb6 said:
The screw looks useable .
roflroflroflrofl

wyson

3,924 posts

128 months

Wednesday 9th April 2025
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cerb4.5lee said:
CoolHands said:
Radec said:
Take it to Kwik Fit for a laugh
4 new tyres + a new exhaust
hehe

I'm not sure where the exhaust is going on a Tesla though?! biggrin
https://youtu.be/6O5mbgjOaQU

Around 5:44.

Probably something Halfords would try and sell you TBF.

Simon_GH

863 posts

104 months

Thursday 10th April 2025
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P2KKA said:
I would back out the screw and forget about it personally. But my cars aren't nearly as heavy as a Tesla..
I’d back it out and keep an eye on the sidewall for bulges. Perhaps don’t drive the car on its door handles for a few miles.