This fella is Dr tyre for the level of detail and care plus tooling he's employed to bring this tyre back into service. From the comments it obvious most do not understand the principle of tyres and the magic repair the workman has just done. He used the small pieces to create the strong thread structure most are complaining about. Multilayer is what remakes the wall integrity and he does this inside and outside. Also remember it's a cheap repair for countries where high speed driving is not the norm so should be ok for up to 40km speeds so far as it's being used to carry heavy loads. Fantastic work from this fella. This is great Workmanship 👍 👌 👏
Not so. If done properly the repair should work fine. The injury is a little larger than I would usually fix on a passenger tire, but using the proper radial patch, and floating the patch in will give about as much strength as the tire originally had. The proper patch will replace the radial cords that run from beed to beed but must be anchord at both ends on a solid undamaged part of the tire. People freak out when they see such repairs not knowing that truck tires are running all over America that have injuries so huge they wouldn't believe. The Michelin repair Manual gives you repair sizes and the number of broken body cables for every injury imaginable. A crown injury on most medium truck tires, which is one on the flat part of the tire can be up to 1 1/2 inches in diameter. From memory and not having the specs in front of me, a sidewall can be a thought up and down cut with no broken cables up to 6 inches long, and shorter injuries can be up to an inch wide with many broken body cables. The reason these repairs aren't generally made on passenger tires is due to lack of training and expertise of your average tire shop, and the lack of proper tire maintenance by the average car owner. Section repairs work fine as long as tires are kept properly inflate. A section patch will not fail unless the tire is run low for a considerable distance, and car owners have a habit of looking at a tire and saying it looks good and off they go. Sidewall injuries become more problematic as they approach the beed because there is lack of area to anchor the patch. So much of what people think they know about tires is just street science, and has no place in reality. There is no such thing as a slipped belt. Sidewalls and particular shoulder injuries can be and are patched by people who have the proper repair materials along with the expertise and experience to repair them. Z rated and low profile tires don't have enough sidewall to effectively repair anything but small nail hole repairs in the crown. What can and can not be safely repaired, is something your average $12.00 an hour tire guy can judge or repair. I've repaired thousands of truck tires, light truck tires, and passenger tires, although large repairs are expensive, and generally a passenger tire that it's possible to repair isn't worth the costs involved. And by the way, those are not threads in the sidewall, they a radial cords, just like the ones in the patch that will be used. This guy does a few things I wouldn't do, but his general work is sound.
@@Azznbad cutting a redial cord lining in a truck tire is one thing where those tire doesn't run on high high speed and rotations like a car tire, which is prone to collapse at high speed due to centrifugal force, the side wall lining threads are meant to hold the centrifugal pressure while rotation and under uneven pressure when tire jumps on the potholes and it will FAIL eventually and will create accident in a car. he is repairing a car tire and not a truck tire.
Work is looks good but wht you have done is wrong these are passenger car they go in high speed this can easily burst you should suggest them to use are spare wheel but I know you might not informed and the tools which you're Using is Wrong inside bucket area when you rasp with bebble stone Is not advisable you should use fine brush to get Texture of RMA 2-3 please then you have vulcanized without any patch support inside which is biggest mistake with ply support how the tyre will survive in heavy loads these are not as easy work I agree because am also an engineer doing all these in proper SOP don't show wrong things in UA-cam guide people in proper way don't soil the tyre work people's name 🙏 #TyreEngineer
You would think though that someone who's an engineer, would at least know to find the . symbol on their keyboard. So i don't really believe you're an actual engineer. You would never pass any school with such grammar.
@@petessmith6623 have you ever been in a truck tire repair shop? I don't mean a place with a jack, a buffer, two sizes of patches and the cheapest guy the place could afford to get to take tires on and off a truck. I mean a place where the people can actually tell you exactly what is going to be revealed as they grind into an injury, and knows how differently each tire is constructed? If you have never seen a section repair preformed, then you would be amazed what is and is not repairable, and that's according to manufacturer repair specifications. They are much more complicated than what this guy is doing. You look at what he is doing and it scares the hell our of you because you do not understand the science involved in tire repair. Picture a half dollar, now picture a hole that large in the crown of a tire. That tire is repairable provided it meets all the parameters of the section repair you preform. Now imagine a five inch sidewall cut 1/4 inch wide. That us repairable according to various manufacturer repair specs. The reason most places won't even fix a nail hole in the shoulder isn't because it isn't repairable, it's because most tire shops will not get their people trained to use the proper patch and technique to make a lasting repair. Tire shops have told you for years that sidewalls can't be repaired, when the real answer is they simply don't know how to patch the tire or have the proper materials to make the repair. Your not buying it, so I won't attempted to confuse you with fact since your mind is made up, but vehicles pass you daily with larger repairs than this gut did, mainly on trucks, and you have no clue about which ones they are.
То что там будет грыжа это понятно! Для того что бы отбалансировать это колесо нужна куча грузиков! Но и это не гарантия того что оно не будет сильно бить при движении! Вывод один: колесо нужно выкидывать!
Whatever gets ya buy in a pinch I've never gone to that much work for a sidewall repair but I've been running 3 tires on my half ton for the past 5 years or so with sidewall patches on them. Even used plugs on a sidewall. Do what ya gotta do and yeah maybe not the safest but haters gonna hate cause they can't improvise in a struggle like this guy. Props to this guy good job.
What in the bottle ? We can use rubber patch cement for vulcanised repair ? I need to repair a brake booster bladder and I am not sure what ingredients to use 😕
People do far more dangerous things with their tires and never give it a thought. Plugging a tire is far more dangerous than a section repair done properly.
I've seen all your comments and yes its also illegal her in the Uk but I've seen these repairs out last the bloody tire. Dunlop have a similar repair kit but i guess its ok that they do and make a profit off it
In poor countries, this sort of repair is the norm, especially when there is a lot of tread left. I admit that this could be a weak patch, because there was no steel wire mesh put across the hole. The rubber vulcanization is fine, but the wire mesh would've strengthened it better. In the US, there is no sidewall repair. The steel wire was compromised making the tread unsafe. A blowout will be imminent eventually at high speeds above forty mph. There are lots of countries that don't have the standards of the UK, Canada and the US. In Pakistan and India, it's what works for awhile. No state inspections, just fix it the best you can so it will last for a few more miles.
I think this is going to be used for a small goods carrier's rear wheel and it probably will be running at 30mph. Car owners here in India don't prefer any sidewall repair.. as they tend to short and often don't work at 60mph.
The steel wire you saw plays little role in the structure of the tire. It's what the tread rides on. The sidewall has no steel in it. It is made up of rayon or some other body cord material and the patch has the same thing in it. In truck tires which do have steel body cables, the same kind of patches are routinely used for section repair either to repair a sidewall cut to put the tire back in service or when retreading the tire. Recappers actually put to many section repairs in retreads for problems that can be dealt with other ways. Missing steel in a tire is not a problem so long as the repairman knows how the tire is built and what each part of tire does for the overall tire.
That repair would never be done on a 175/70r13. The patch alone is $10 or more, plus the other repair materials. Then labor and all the costs of labor overhead etc. A 175/70r13 is the cheapest tire out there and few people are going to pay for a $40 repair plus mounting. Something like LT235/85R16 can easily justify the expense.
i bet hes never had a customer come back and complain....after it blew out a second time and the car catapaulted off the road in to a temporary traffic island...commonly known as elephant doo doos.
That tire is a PERFECT candidate for one of those "making sandals from old tire" videos. Otherwise I hope the owner only goes 35 mph with it on the rear of the car, and to get somewhere close, to replace the tire.
And just because you don't understand the science and engineering in it doesn't mean it's wrong. You've been told your entire life that sidewall punctures can't be patched, and that utter bs. Most tire shops simply won't spend the money to train their minimum wage employees how a tire is even built, much less doing repairs that require knowledge. Better not be driving along side that 18 wheeler because repairs much larger than that are done every day on truck tires with few to no problems. Of course you can justify a $75.00 to $100.00 repair plus mounting on a tire that retails for $700.00
This fella is Dr tyre for the level of detail and care plus tooling he's employed to bring this tyre back into service.
From the comments it obvious most do not understand the principle of tyres and the magic repair the workman has just done. He used the small pieces to create the strong thread structure most are complaining about. Multilayer is what remakes the wall integrity and he does this inside and outside.
Also remember it's a cheap repair for countries where high speed driving is not the norm so should be ok for up to 40km speeds so far as it's being used to carry heavy loads.
Fantastic work from this fella. This is great Workmanship 👍 👌 👏
Great work my friend. Two thumbs up!
Ya know he has good integrity and for low budget, good for him, and yes on watch extreme usage on repaired tire
Hai Good Afternoon Super idea Super job Super Repar ing Super finish ing 👍👍👍👍👌👌
Most dangerous repair I’ve ever seen. And I’ve seen zip ties for engine mounts
رمي هذا الاطارافضل من استعماله لان الجودة ونسبة الامان صفرقديعرض للانفجارالاطاراثناء قيادة المركبة
HE ripped the threads of the tyre wall. And the tyre has become a speeding time bomb.
Yes what a bloody idiot
Not so. If done properly the repair should work fine. The injury is a little larger than I would usually fix on a passenger tire, but using the proper radial patch, and floating the patch in will give about as much strength as the tire originally had. The proper patch will replace the radial cords that run from beed to beed but must be anchord at both ends on a solid undamaged part of the tire. People freak out when they see such repairs not knowing that truck tires are running all over America that have injuries so huge they wouldn't believe. The Michelin repair Manual gives you repair sizes and the number of broken body cables for every injury imaginable. A crown injury on most medium truck tires, which is one on the flat part of the tire can be up to 1 1/2 inches in diameter. From memory and not having the specs in front of me, a sidewall can be a thought up and down cut with no broken cables up to 6 inches long, and shorter injuries can be up to an inch wide with many broken body cables.
The reason these repairs aren't generally made on passenger tires is due to lack of training and expertise of your average tire shop, and the lack of proper tire maintenance by the average car owner. Section repairs work fine as long as tires are kept properly inflate. A section patch will not fail unless the tire is run low for a considerable distance, and car owners have a habit of looking at a tire and saying it looks good and off they go.
Sidewall injuries become more problematic as they approach the beed because there is lack of area to anchor the patch.
So much of what people think they know about tires is just street science, and has no place in reality. There is no such thing as a slipped belt. Sidewalls and particular shoulder injuries can be and are patched by people who have the proper repair materials along with the expertise and experience to repair them. Z rated and low profile tires don't have enough sidewall to effectively repair anything but small nail hole repairs in the crown. What can and can not be safely repaired, is something your average $12.00 an hour tire guy can judge or repair. I've repaired thousands of truck tires, light truck tires, and passenger tires, although large repairs are expensive, and generally a passenger tire that it's possible to repair isn't worth the costs involved.
And by the way, those are not threads in the sidewall, they a radial cords, just like the ones in the patch that will be used. This guy does a few things I wouldn't do, but his general work is sound.
@@Azznbad cutting a redial cord lining in a truck tire is one thing where those tire doesn't run on high high speed and rotations like a car tire, which is prone to collapse at high speed due to centrifugal force, the side wall lining threads are meant to hold the centrifugal pressure while rotation and under uneven pressure when tire jumps on the potholes and it will FAIL eventually and will create accident in a car. he is repairing a car tire and not a truck tire.
Pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp00000
Ñññññññññññ
Ñññññññññññññññññññññ
Awesome ..hardwork never fails
Spent 2 bucks to craft a driving coffin huge skills...sarcastically
Work is looks good but wht you have done is wrong these are passenger car they go in high speed this can easily burst you should suggest them to use are spare wheel but I know you might not informed and the tools which you're Using is Wrong inside bucket area when you rasp with bebble stone Is not advisable you should use fine brush to get Texture of RMA 2-3 please then you have vulcanized without any patch support inside which is biggest mistake with ply support how the tyre will survive in heavy loads these are not as easy work I agree because am also an engineer doing all these in proper SOP don't show wrong things in UA-cam guide people in proper way don't soil the tyre work people's name 🙏 #TyreEngineer
You would think though that someone who's an engineer, would at least know to find the . symbol on their keyboard. So i don't really believe you're an actual engineer. You would never pass any school with such grammar.
Good work, very interesting.
I like the fact that he puts a heart on every comment no matter what it is lol
I can’t think for the life of me why there are so many deaths on the roads in India and Pakistan.
Those repairs are done right here in the USA and cause few problems
@@Azznbad well in the uk it’s illegal to repair the side wall of tyre. Cause it’s dangerous and it’s the part of the tyre that flexes the most.
टायर में घिसने वाला स्टोन कहां से लाया हमको चाहिए
Great work you doing and enjoy video.
This type of tire repair is illegal in my country as it's deemed a safety hazard due to the structure of the sidewall being compromised.
That's the sole reason for watching this because it's incredibly dangerous.
But over there it's legal as fuck
ر بھائی جو آپ کے پاس ٹائپ کرنے والی مشین ہے
بھائی جو آپ کے پاس گیارہ سو بیس پر ٹائر کھولتے اور پنج
@@petessmith6623 have you ever been in a truck tire repair shop? I don't mean a place with a jack, a buffer, two sizes of patches and the cheapest guy the place could afford to get to take tires on and off a truck. I mean a place where the people can actually tell you exactly what is going to be revealed as they grind into an injury, and knows how differently each tire is constructed?
If you have never seen a section repair preformed, then you would be amazed what is and is not repairable, and that's according to manufacturer repair specifications. They are much more complicated than what this guy is doing.
You look at what he is doing and it scares the hell our of you because you do not understand the science involved in tire repair.
Picture a half dollar, now picture a hole that large in the crown of a tire. That tire is repairable provided it meets all the parameters of the section repair you preform. Now imagine a five inch sidewall cut 1/4 inch wide. That us repairable according to various manufacturer repair specs. The reason most places won't even fix a nail hole in the shoulder isn't because it isn't repairable, it's because most tire shops will not get their people trained to use the proper patch and technique to make a lasting repair. Tire shops have told you for years that sidewalls can't be repaired, when the real answer is they simply don't know how to patch the tire or have the proper materials to make the repair. Your not buying it, so I won't attempted to confuse you with fact since your mind is made up, but vehicles pass you daily with larger repairs than this gut did, mainly on trucks, and you have no clue about which ones they are.
То что там будет грыжа это понятно! Для того что бы отбалансировать это колесо нужна куча грузиков! Но и это не гарантия того что оно не будет сильно бить при движении! Вывод один: колесо нужно выкидывать!
Для гужевой повозки сойдет, ишак быстро не бегает)
لو كان الفقر رجلا لقتلته
Whatever gets ya buy in a pinch I've never gone to that much work for a sidewall repair but I've been running 3 tires on my half ton for the past 5 years or so with sidewall patches on them. Even used plugs on a sidewall. Do what ya gotta do and yeah maybe not the safest but haters gonna hate cause they can't improvise in a struggle like this guy. Props to this guy good job.
What in the bottle ?
We can use rubber patch cement for vulcanised repair ?
I need to repair a brake booster bladder and I am not sure what ingredients to use 😕
If you love your family never do this.
A way to get rid of a nasty mother-in-law!
People do far more dangerous things with their tires and never give it a thought. Plugging a tire is far more dangerous than a section repair done properly.
what happened bro
this man can repair plane's tyres after used...he is trying to do it more stronger than company.. 😀😀😀
Good Job, as long as excessive speeds are not in practice, I’d be good to go.
Don’t waste anything.!
Gadi highway par 80-90 se upper nhi ja skti .. Vibration strat ho jati hi .. Guyz plz dont repair. Better to buy new one.
Slow drive long life... tyre ki v or zindagi ki v🤣🤣🤣
@@MKS-VLOGS overtake krna pdta hai bhut baar majboori mein ..
,
Not recommended for front wheel fitment and also for High way'drive,only recommended for shuttle service
@@kishore1640 yes bro.
சிறப்பு மகிழ்ச்சி
I've seen all your comments and yes its also illegal her in the Uk but I've seen these repairs out last the bloody tire. Dunlop have a similar repair kit but i guess its ok that they do and make a profit off it
Good work bro
Ну это семейный бизнес у него наверное в соседнем ларьке, брат. Ходовик. 🤣
Will that tyre hold air,?
What is the name for that thing he is using to fix the tyre
Nice work .
What kind of rubber is that?
What's coming into my mind is a dentist when I watch this video 😂
Where to get the rubber sticker
Please don’t make the whistle noise
Not gonna compromise the safety of my family with that kind of repair.. and that will still be costly.
Hlo sir ,if you don't mind plz. Share one vedio, the tyre bend Machin jack connections and fittings process ..
In poor countries, this sort of repair is the norm, especially when there is a lot of tread left. I admit that this could be a weak patch, because there was no steel wire mesh put across the hole. The rubber vulcanization is fine, but the wire mesh would've strengthened it better. In the US, there is no sidewall repair. The steel wire was compromised making the tread unsafe. A blowout will be imminent eventually at high speeds above forty mph. There are lots of countries that don't have the standards of the UK, Canada and the US. In Pakistan and India, it's what works for awhile. No state inspections, just fix it the best you can so it will last for a few more miles.
I think this is going to be used for a small goods carrier's rear wheel and it probably will be running at 30mph.
Car owners here in India don't prefer any sidewall repair.. as they tend to short and often don't work at 60mph.
,a..
Lateral de pneu n tem arame amigo e so borracha!!!
Sorry sir but there is no steel wire in a sidewall of a tire. It's just polyester thread
The steel wire you saw plays little role in the structure of the tire. It's what the tread rides on. The sidewall has no steel in it. It is made up of rayon or some other body cord material and the patch has the same thing in it. In truck tires which do have steel body cables, the same kind of patches are routinely used for section repair either to repair a sidewall cut to put the tire back in service or when retreading the tire. Recappers actually put to many section repairs in retreads for problems that can be dealt with other ways. Missing steel in a tire is not a problem so long as the repairman knows how the tire is built and what each part of tire does for the overall tire.
It's a bicycle repair. I can't drive because I'm scared that there are no steel wires in the sidewalls.
Anong gamit na rubber
esse pneu pode furar em outros lugar nesse lugar aí nunca mais.
Бедность и нищета не позволят людям жить нормально.
Awesome.. excellent skill and superb workmanship. Well done bro. God Bless 🙏🏻🙏🏻
You know there are reasons this would be an illegal repair in most countries. Would you let your wife and kids in a car with a wheel like this???
At least he's wearing safety gla.... erm, I mean safety sho.. I meant glov.. Hmm. Glad he's safe at work
Эта шина должна быть на помойке , столько проделанной работы ради того что бы она не стала нормальной шиной . Вывод это колесо нужно утилизировать !
Can be used as a spare tyre
Or car will vibrate on higher speeds
No it won't. The tire can be balanced just like any other tire.
Don't risk your life for just saving a little money....
Special repair of horse-drawn carriage wheels
Ai.lok pabo kothay???
In countries where a common 175/70/13 tire costs $100, owners end up taking these risks
They don't cost $100! They sell used tires just like anywhere else, this is just unecessary dangerous.
It may be easy for you to say, in third world countries, it will take months to make $100.
@@awk55 again,. What you think is $100 in the western world costs maybe $5 there,. Currencies are very different.. you buy a car there for $100!
That repair would never be done on a 175/70r13. The patch alone is $10 or more, plus the other repair materials. Then labor and all the costs of labor overhead etc. A 175/70r13 is the cheapest tire out there and few people are going to pay for a $40 repair plus mounting. Something like LT235/85R16 can easily justify the expense.
i bet hes never had a customer come back and complain....after it blew out a second time and the car catapaulted off the road in to a temporary traffic island...commonly known as elephant doo doos.
Bhai glue Kya dala thoda batao
Side wall repair in radial tyres is not recommended. Just to make money out of any thing people will go any extent risking lives
Bhai ye mashine kaha milegi mujhe bhi Lena hai
هذا الإصلاح خطر لان الاربطة والاسلاك الداخلية لتسليح الاطار مقطوعة
عندي الكثير من الدوالي مثل اللتي تقم باصلاحها
nice job
Nice 👍
Very good video
Never perform this type of repair on a passenger tire, it is illegal in most countries and highly unsafe
Nota 1000, o preço do reparo compensa?
Hi
I would replace. Never even considered repairing this
and then when the tyre blows and the car rolls they wonder why, life is cheaper then a new tyre there it seems.
Yeah kit kahanmilegi
That tire is now being used on a horse drawn cart.
Nice puncher sar
Я так и не понял, а куда он приклеил слоёный бутерброд?
Bhai appka dukan khanha pe hain,,,
Bahut kub
This is illegal in most countries. But kind of ok in some countries where tires have more value than citizens lives.
Vả như này đi ko an toàn chút nào cả,
maybe this price of tire is cheap, but your safety can also be very cheap
El pip y el silbido…enfermantes.Distraen ver el trabajo.Evítenlos para la próxima.
Tyre ghusne wala machine ka kya naam hai
Not in America! No way man
-If you used cord fabric, i would say "bravo!"
He did. It's on the patch
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
बहुत बढ़िया भाई साहब आप की दुकान कहां है कितना खर्च आता है
Could have just availed the warranty from tyre company
🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹.by Francesco. Bravo
Auto ka tayer uper se ek tarf ka bhag 3inch lamba khula hai to
Usko kaise chipkay
Andar se sahi hai
Right to repair tyre and recycle tyre
That tire is a PERFECT candidate for one of those "making sandals from old tire" videos. Otherwise I hope the owner only goes 35 mph with it on the rear of the car, and to get somewhere close, to replace the tire.
Well that would be a perfect tire for making sandals. Pretty sure I would never trust it at 35 miles an hour.
Or make it into a tire swing for the kids.
Cut pe andar se patch lagana chahiye
Rule no 1 of owing a vehicle - Never Ever Cheap out on tyres and brakes.
If this is unusual brother wait for the plane to land in some parts of this world,then you can comment...
This kind of repair is acceptable in these countries because LIFE is very cheap and no one is held responsible for the loss.
Very unsafe to use such tyres.never use such neither front nor rear especially on the highway.Its like risking lives
Your work good,but I think you should use patch too, for strong life of tyre
Both are helps to increase the life times
Especially if repairing a sidewall. Strips would work better if heated before applied to tire.
Yes
Supper
The perfect repair!
Hello from,
San Francisco, California.
And with the proper finger action in that black glue, a better grip on an ear of corn or chicken leg is obtained!!!!
Just because something can be done does not mean it should be done.
And just because you don't understand the science and engineering in it doesn't mean it's wrong. You've been told your entire life that sidewall punctures can't be patched, and that utter bs. Most tire shops simply won't spend the money to train their minimum wage employees how a tire is even built, much less doing repairs that require knowledge. Better not be driving along side that 18 wheeler because repairs much larger than that are done every day on truck tires with few to no problems. Of course you can justify a $75.00 to $100.00 repair plus mounting on a tire that retails for $700.00
Safety first so much
and the problem look how many subscribers the channel have, this video should be renamed to how not to repair tires volcanically
Am in Zambia Ndola
Under ka zo patch lagaya tha vo to chipaka hai nahi
This is dengerous ...
Same repair Technic in Germany
How much it costs
Danger
Muito bom você é profissional!