i've never had an issue with getting free air from chevron.
Any places offer free air for tires?
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Originally posted by EarendilI listen to the band M20 almost exclusively these days. They have some mad tick beats, and without firewall insulation or an interior it's almost as good as watching M20 live. Sometimes when I'm really in a rocking mood, I crank the volume up to 6K. -
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Go to a gas station its free, at least where I live it is. Or Pep boys provides free gas too!!IG: @_j.wnComment
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yea, about freakin time-FREEDOM- is cruisin at 80, windows down and listening to the perfect song-thinking "this is it"
-The Beauty in the Tragedy-
MECHANIC SMASH!!- (you all know you do it)
Got Drop?? ;-)
Originally posted by JinormusJBut of course
E30s are know to be notoriously really really really ridiculously good lookingComment
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Any America's Tire/Discount Tire will get you free nitrogen in your tires, not that it makes any noticeable difference.Comment
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Don't ever use those plugs in car tires, they let in water which can rust the steel belts and cause major tire failure. Any tire shop worth your time will fix a flat for free and do a much more thorough job than what you'll get with a patch kit.Comment
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Gotta say though, I've done several of these patch kits. First time I ever used the product I was on a motorcycle tour in the middle of nowhere. had to run two patches in the rear tire.. elevation changes on that tour were 50ft (portland) to 9500 ft (yosemite), temperatures between 35 and 105 degrees. Those patches lasted over 2500 miles. I checked the pressure throughout the tour to make sure air pressure was correct, it never leaked. I changed the tire when I got home, patches looked bulletproof from inside (no moisture). It's key to use the provided rubber cement, it forms a seal.
Ive also ran patch kits in my cars for over 10k miles and when I changed the tire I found zero water or moisture in the tire and found no abnormal wear around the patch area.
Follow the directions, be liberal while you apply the rubber cement and I am a firm believer that these kits are excellent for automotive tires. If you can find a tire shop to professionally fix your leaking tire for free, DO IT. Might get some free popcorn while your waiting. But if not- buy a patch kit.Comment
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Chances are they'll be fine 90% of the time. There's just a lot higher chance of failure than the methods we use at tire shops (I work at America's Tire), if that weren't the case then we would definitely use them in car tires. Shoving a leather plug in a hole is so much easier than drilling out the hole, putting a rubber plug in, grinding that down, putting a patch over it, then globing on the sealer.Comment
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