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Home > Wheels & Tyres > Water in tyres. Any ideas why ? |
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drdelrrs Member Since: 02 Nov 2010 Location: UK Posts: 1163 |
Since its such a strange occurrence I'd be keen to ask the dealership why they thought this was the issue - have they seen it frequently?
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Sat Jan 25 2014 6:27pm |
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Ady 555 Site Moderator Member Since: 12 Dec 2010 Location: Good old yorkshire Posts: 8738 |
Perhaps the car had previously been off roading in deep water or just been in a flood that they were aware of, or recently experienced this from a previous sport. |
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Sat Jan 25 2014 6:58pm |
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Terryrrs Member Since: 25 Dec 2013 Location: Suffolk Posts: 158 |
Even if the rims have become porous there is no way water would get in whilst the tyres had pressure in them. You would also be losing pressure so for some reason water was deliberately put in or there was more water in the compressor tank than air.
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Sat Jan 25 2014 7:25pm |
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Ady 555 Site Moderator Member Since: 12 Dec 2010 Location: Good old yorkshire Posts: 8738 |
Possibly so, but it may have been off roading with very low tyre pressures as often most people do. |
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Sat Jan 25 2014 7:31pm |
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Moog2014 Member Since: 13 Jan 2014 Location: East mids Posts: 12 |
The car came from a LR main dealer in Surrey, ex JLR management with 12k on the clock. Local dealership, is just outside Coventry. They advised experiencing water in rims on a "few" ex JLR vehicles, on the back of me discussing booking it for a health check to investigate the vibration. Looking around the chassis on the ramp it does not appear to have any of the usual witness marks from off-roading. |
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Sat Jan 25 2014 7:52pm |
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flack Member Since: 24 Feb 2013 Location: Preston Posts: 379 |
I have seen this before, but very rare, its normally caused by a garage or dealership not checking or not having a automatic water trap in the air system, or just no trap at all. You would be surprised how much water a bad system can inject in to the wheel when under pressure.
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Sat Jan 25 2014 8:35pm |
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Ady 555 Site Moderator Member Since: 12 Dec 2010 Location: Good old yorkshire Posts: 8738 |
^^^^ |
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Sat Jan 25 2014 9:00pm |
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Moog2014 Member Since: 13 Jan 2014 Location: East mids Posts: 12 |
Think you nailed it Flack. Highly likely the compressor culprit was a factory associated one, given the other few ex management cars that have been seen with the same issue. Thing is though you could not really feel anything wrong until you were just around the legal limit. Then it would ramp up to something nasty in a very small increase of mph. This would be where the water no longer sat merrily in the bottom of the tyre, gravity taking over to a point where the water became a 1.5 kg out of balance mass / wheel weight ! |
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Sat Jan 25 2014 11:16pm |
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