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Most off-roaders have encountered a rock or branch that meets the valve stem in the rim, in such a way as to allow all the air out of the tire. If the valve stem is destroyed or pulled out of the rim, there is a much bigger problem.
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Another solution is to obtain shorter rubber valves, like from a wheelbarrow tire, that are just long enough to hold the valve cap. These come in metal also.
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In the past, Off Roaders have tried moving the valve stem inboard in the rim so that the vulnerability of the stem is reduced. This requires drilling a hole and
inserting a new valve stem next to the disc of the wheel. If you have reversible wheels this can allow you to have better access to both sides of the rim when airing up or down. Some leave the valve on both sides of
the rim. Others get the unused hole welded up to seal the rim again and allow only one valve in the rim.
Click though the photo to the left and you will see the weld within the
red circle. Old timers may remember the bright engineering idea that cars had where the spare was provided with two valves, one to air up the space saver spare and the other to air it down again after use. It went the way of the
Edsel, but this application should reassure you that you can safely run with two valves in one
rim - provided your caliper doesn't remove it after the reversal has been accomplished... seen that too... embarrassing like an open fly in public.
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The cost of this protecting your valves can vary but a guide could be my costs, encountered when doing some of the above.
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| These costs do not include removing the tire from the rim and re-installing
/ balancing it. If you can remove tires and bring the rims to the welder already prepped, the above prices may be very close. It is conceivable that anyone who can grind, weld, drill holes and also remove the tires from the rims could do everything but balance the wheels on their own, in the back yard.
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| Before trying any of this, the disclaimer is: Talk to your local DOT enforcement people. If they say you can only run on the trails with this arrangement, do us all a favor and follow their advice... Remember Moab and the bead locks? Above all, keep the rubber side down. R. Low Santa Fe, NM |
09/15/04 14:52
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