![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:08 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:17 |
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Did YouTube suggest this video to literally everyone yesterday?
![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:36 |
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“And watch where you’re going next time !”
![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:44 |
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Damn dude....this is crazy!
I wonder how many man hours that is and how much a new tire costs that the picked the repair!
![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:46 |
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Well it’s a $30,000 tire and it appears to be in mostly real time.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 15:51 |
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That was deeply satisfying to watch. Like oh my god I didn’t know a tyre repair could be so captivating.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:19 |
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Rema tip top also makes bicycle repair kits. So they make kits from the smallest to the largest tires.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:47 |
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Hard to believe, isn’t it? But it seemes so. Maybe there is some intervall for the cement to stick.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:48 |
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Seems sp. Has no connenction with my previously watched videos.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:48 |
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Now that’s what I call a puncture!
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:49 |
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No way. That’s got to be 2 days of work. Did you see how much stitching they have to do? I bet it’s a $2,000 repair plus freight.
![]() 12/09/2016 at 16:49 |
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I know. From now on I imagine myself a doing this when I patch a bicycle tube.
![]() 12/10/2016 at 08:35 |
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I work at a large mine in MN at the Mobile Equipment Shop. That tire appears to be similar to a 992g Cat Loader tire. The haul trucks we have have 6 slightly larger tires. They cost about $40,000 each. We have punctures constantly and I’ve always wondered how they repaired them. They are sent to an outside contractor to be repaired.