Constantly reinflating a tire is going to weaken the sidewalls. Not so much the reinflation, but the sitting/driving underinflated. Eventually the tire is going to fail. If you're lucky, all it does is shred itself. If you're unlucky it's going to take out the mudflap/bracket. If you're REALLY unlucky, it's going to damage the frame rails.
The nightmare scenario is the tire blows while a car is next to it, damaging the car/causing the car to crash. At that point you'll be faced with a Billboard Lawyer that's going to try and bleed you dry.
A new tire is cheap compared to a lawsuit.
Air supply on road, pretrip for short runs?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by larry_minn, Apr 28, 2025 at 10:41 PM.
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Find the leak and repair it, or replace the tire.Sirscrapntruckalot Thanks this. -
If you’re counting your nickels and dimes, purchase a tire plug kit Amazon or eBay. Btw, the rubber grommets on the stem dry out after a while. See if can tighten it up a bit. Better yet, find the slow leak first. And take it from there.
Sirscrapntruckalot and gentleroger Thank this. -
gentleroger, Diesel Dave and Sirscrapntruckalot Thank this.
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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