I’d taken delivery of a sparkling new Mercedes A45 AMG just three days earlier, and until then I’d been revelling in the joys of new car ownership.
Working out what all the buttons do, enjoying the smell that a new car gives off and bonding with the thing generally.
And then, crunch, turning right out of a side road I could feel that I’d run over something weird; something that was so small I didn’t see it coming, but which was also sharp enough to make the front right tyre sound like I’d just inserted a massive blakey into it, hence the tell-tale 'tic, tic, tic' I could hear from then on.
So I pulled over, wound on full left lock and rolled the A45 gently forwards in neutral, and sure enough there it was, a great big screw head staring back at me. “Oh bugger,” I thought, and as Paul Whitehouse might say. And then I headed straight to the nearest Kwik Fit, which just so happened to be not very far up the road at all.
The screw was a pretty big one, but I’ve never yet known a puncture like this to be un-fixable. As long as it’s in the treads they can usually insert a small plug into the hole and then seal it with adhesive.
The Kwik Fit man agreed that it was indeed a big one, but he also agreed that it could almost certainly be fixed. So he whipped the tyre off its rim – and promptly discovered a tiny but deep slash on the inside shoulder of the A45’s otherwise brand new 235/40 ZR 18 Continental. Unfortunately this had ruptured the tyre’s core, which meant that it couldn't be fixed.
As for the nail damage, this would have been no problem whatsoever to sort, but it was also irrelevant because the slash damage was too severe. Which meant that I had a right old dilemma on my hands.
Understandably the Kwik Fit man said he couldn’t let me go with the slash damage in situ because, even though it was tiny, he wasn’t legally allowed to refit a tyre whose core was damaged, albeit fractionally. There was also no spare tyre fitted to the car, and this particular kind of damage was well beyond the repair kit anyway.
As you may know I have one or two contacts in the tyre industry, and if I’d known what was going to happen, well, I could perhaps have called one up and maybe got some kind of a discount on a new 235/40 ZR18 tyre. And even if not, then at the very least I could, if I’d known, have done half an hour’s worth of research on the internet and sourced a replacement Continental at well below the recommended retail price.
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Full size spare every time
Spare essential.
once bitten...
If you've ever had a puncture and been able to fix it in 15mins at the side of the road (as I have, several times), you'll wonder how it's legal not to either supply a spare or fit run-flats. Tyre fitters simply aren't open 24/7 - and the emergency inflation kits render tyres un-repairable anyway.
At the very least, make it a personal choice. Some cars (like the S-Max for example) don't even have a space to take a spare. Manufacturers dressing up their cost cutting as 'saving weight to improve economy' are disingenuous
RFT
I would add that the use of extended mobility tires have become more common and not in a good way.
I had a 135i several years ago when they came out and blew out the highly stressed front tire and had to be towed to a dealership on a Sunday. After paying out USD 568 and returning to the dealership the next day I had my car back. That also necessitated another 165 mile trip to get it and then another 165 miles to go back home. The BMW emergency call person was polite, but of no use in solving what to do far from home and on a Sunday.
Never had issues with my two Minis.
I just obtained a 2014 MB GLK 250 Bluetec which also has RFT, although Mercedes prefers to call them extended mobility tires rather than run flat, due to the poor connotation of the RFT moniker.
The problem is that at this point in time, the only place to purchase the replacement Dunlop 235/50-19 tires is at Mercedes. Dunlop USA does not carry the tire at any retail location and no other manufacturer does either.
I am bit nervous as winter is approaching, but I suppose that sooner or later, somebody will carry an appropriate tire.
Well to be honest......!
woj@
To be obvious, you could just buy a set of Winter tyres that aren't Run Flats......?
.
Changing the subject slightly (well completely in fact) from tyres. Headlight Bulbs? I am compelled by law to carry a set of spare bulbs when travelling on the continent, and I have had a Gendarme tap me on the shoulder while I was filling up on an autoroute to tell me I had a brake light out and that I couldn't proceed until I'd fixed it. Should a similar event occur with a headlight bulb I'd be bu**ered. My non exotic 2004 Skoda requires the headlights removing to change the bulb (regular halogen not HID) To remove a headlamp you first need to remove the bumper...
Not a bright idea!!!!