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#1
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Tires not holding air?
I have a strange tire problem......
I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It is the SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on alloy wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once (and I did check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the low tire pressure warning light came on when I was on the way to work. I was afraid I had a tire going down, but the car drove normally so I continued on to work. As soon as I got to work I looked at the tires and all appeared normal. When I got home and checked, the pressure in all four tires was in the mid-20s. Weird. I reinflated all the tires to 35 psi. All seemed fine for the next 3 weeks or so, until yesterday. The low tire pressure light illuminated on the way to work again. As before when I looked, the tires seemed fine. As before, when I checked the pressure, 3 of the 4 were in the mid 20s, one was in the low 20s. I reinflated the tires to 35 again. I've had a lot of cars and a lot of tires, and never before have I had a set of tires (four tires, not just one) lose 10 pounds of pressure in less than a month. Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a mid July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. The trips were quick (600 miles, <10 hours including stops). Is it possible I somehow damage the tire structures in such a way that all four are now uniformly (more or less) leaking air at a much higher rate than normal? Parts of I-95 are really rough, it was really hot, and the trip to Florida and back was fairly relentless. Ed |
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#2
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Tires not holding air?
A lot of tire valves are made in china nowadays.That might have
something to do with your leaky tires. cuhulin |
#3
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Tires not holding air?
"C. E. White" > wrote in message ... >I have a strange tire problem...... > > I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It is > the SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on alloy > wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once (and I did > check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the low tire > pressure warning light came on when I was on the way to work. I was afraid > I had a tire going down, but the car drove normally so I continued on to > work. As soon as I got to work I looked at the tires and all appeared > normal. When I got home and checked, the pressure in all four tires was in > the mid-20s. Weird. I reinflated all the tires to 35 psi. All seemed fine > for the next 3 weeks or so, until yesterday. The low tire pressure light > illuminated on the way to work again. As before when I looked, the tires > seemed fine. As before, when I checked the pressure, 3 of the 4 were in > the mid 20s, one was in the low 20s. I reinflated the tires to 35 again. > I've had a lot of cars and a lot of tires, and never before have I had a > set of tires (four tires, not just one) lose 10 pounds of pressure in less > than a month. > > Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a mid > July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. The > trips were quick (600 miles, <10 hours including stops). Is it possible I > somehow damage the tire structures in such a way that all four are now > uniformly (more or less) leaking air at a much higher rate than normal? > Parts of I-95 are really rough, it was really hot, and the trip to Florida > and back was fairly relentless. > > Ed > Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak is very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked loose just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen leaks around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. -- SC Tom |
#4
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Tires not holding air?
"SC Tom" > wrote in message ... > > "C. E. White" > wrote in message > ... >>I have a strange tire problem...... >> >> I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It is >> the SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on alloy >> wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once (and I did >> check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the low tire >> pressure warning light came on when I was on the way to work. I was >> afraid I had a tire going down, but the car drove normally so I continued >> on to work. As soon as I got to work I looked at the tires and all >> appeared normal. When I got home and checked, the pressure in all four >> tires was in the mid-20s. Weird. I reinflated all the tires to 35 psi. >> All seemed fine for the next 3 weeks or so, until yesterday. The low tire >> pressure light illuminated on the way to work again. As before when I >> looked, the tires seemed fine. As before, when I checked the pressure, 3 >> of the 4 were in the mid 20s, one was in the low 20s. I reinflated the >> tires to 35 again. I've had a lot of cars and a lot of tires, and never >> before have I had a set of tires (four tires, not just one) lose 10 >> pounds of pressure in less than a month. >> >> Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a >> mid July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. The >> trips were quick (600 miles, <10 hours including stops). Is it possible I >> somehow damage the tire structures in such a way that all four are now >> uniformly (more or less) leaking air at a much higher rate than normal? >> Parts of I-95 are really rough, it was really hot, and the trip to >> Florida and back was fairly relentless. >> >> Ed >> > > Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a > while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a > liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and > the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) and > see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak is very > slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked loose just > enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen leaks around > the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. I've had one fail like youu are suggesting.....but all four at the same time? Ed |
#5
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Tires not holding air?
"C. E. White" > wrote in message ... > > "SC Tom" > wrote in message ... >> >> "C. E. White" > wrote in message >> ... >>>I have a strange tire problem...... >>> >>> I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It is >>> the SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on >>> alloy wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once (and >>> I did check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the low tire >>> pressure warning light came on when I was on the way to work. I was >>> afraid I had a tire going down, but the car drove normally so I >>> continued on to work. As soon as I got to work I looked at the tires and >>> all appeared normal. When I got home and checked, the pressure in all >>> four tires was in the mid-20s. Weird. I reinflated all the tires to 35 >>> psi. All seemed fine for the next 3 weeks or so, until yesterday. The >>> low tire pressure light illuminated on the way to work again. As before >>> when I looked, the tires seemed fine. As before, when I checked the >>> pressure, 3 of the 4 were in the mid 20s, one was in the low 20s. I >>> reinflated the tires to 35 again. I've had a lot of cars and a lot of >>> tires, and never before have I had a set of tires (four tires, not just >>> one) lose 10 pounds of pressure in less than a month. >>> >>> Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a >>> mid July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. >>> The trips were quick (600 miles, <10 hours including stops). Is it >>> possible I somehow damage the tire structures in such a way that all >>> four are now uniformly (more or less) leaking air at a much higher rate >>> than normal? Parts of I-95 are really rough, it was really hot, and the >>> trip to Florida and back was fairly relentless. >>> >>> Ed >>> >> >> Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a >> while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a >> liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and >> the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) >> and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak is >> very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked loose >> just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen leaks >> around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. > > I've had one fail like youu are suggesting.....but all four at the same > time? > > Ed LOL, no, not all four. But maybe with the extreme heat of the Florida trip, maybe the stems loosened some? Those aren't the tires that cam on the Fiesta, are they? Or did it come with Kumho's on it? It would be awfully hard to prove, but maybe some damage from the installer? Still hard to make it all four tires/rims though. Good luck with it. Let us know whatever the resolution is. -- SC Tom |
#6
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Tires not holding air?
"SC Tom" > wrote in message ... > >>> Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a >>> while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a >>> liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and >>> the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) >>> and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak >>> is very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked >>> loose just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen >>> leaks around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. >> >> I've had one fail like youu are suggesting.....but all four at the same >> time? >> >> Ed > > LOL, no, not all four. But maybe with the extreme heat of the Florida > trip, maybe the stems loosened some? Those aren't the tires that cam on > the Fiesta, are they? Or did it come with Kumho's on it? It would be > awfully hard to prove, but maybe some damage from the installer? Still > hard to make it all four tires/rims though. Kumhos are the original equipment tires on 2011 SE Fiestas. The car has the Ford valve stem attached style of pressure transducers with the replaceable rubber valve stems. I have had the same style on two other Fords and never had a problem with the stems or tires - but then I never drove back and forth to Florida in 100 degree July weather with those vehicles. The Kumho tires seem decent. At 15K they still look good, don't bump and seem grippy enough for NC weather (little snow!). But this realtively fast air leaking has be baffled. I guess I need to check them at least weekly (they never have "looked" under inflated). Ed |
#7
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Tires not holding air?
On 08/23/2011 08:51 AM, C. E. White wrote:
> "SC > wrote in message ... >> >>>> Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a >>>> while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a >>>> liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and >>>> the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) >>>> and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak >>>> is very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked >>>> loose just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen >>>> leaks around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. >>> >>> I've had one fail like youu are suggesting.....but all four at the same >>> time? >>> >>> Ed >> >> LOL, no, not all four. But maybe with the extreme heat of the Florida >> trip, maybe the stems loosened some? Those aren't the tires that cam on >> the Fiesta, are they? Or did it come with Kumho's on it? It would be >> awfully hard to prove, but maybe some damage from the installer? Still >> hard to make it all four tires/rims though. > > Kumhos are the original equipment tires on 2011 SE Fiestas. The car has the > Ford valve stem attached style of pressure transducers with the replaceable > rubber valve stems. I have had the same style on two other Fords and never > had a problem with the stems or tires - but then I never drove back and > forth to Florida in 100 degree July weather with those vehicles. > > The Kumho tires seem decent. At 15K they still look good, don't bump and > seem grippy enough for NC weather (little snow!). But this realtively fast > air leaking has be baffled. I guess I need to check them at least weekly > (they never have "looked" under inflated). > > Ed > > there's a very limited number of possible causes, so let's consider: * tires. they're multi-layer, and there are several features designed to help air retention. one is the bead that contacts the rim. another is the butyl rubber liner that decreases air permeability. if either of those have been cheapened, and if you look, you'll see those tires are made in china, they will indeed lose pressure faster than you're used to. * valves and valve stems. the mold seam sealing surface is crucial to airtightness, and it's easy to screw up with a poor quality molding machine. same for the seal bands on the valve. * the rims. while unlikely, rims, especially cheap cast aluminum, can be porous. you could also of course have a flat - a staple on the freeway will explain the single "flattest" tire but still be hard to spot. but the reason they're all losing air so fast, for my money is either tires of valves. you can have the latter replaced cheaply enough. if it's the tires, and it's bugging you bad enough, you'll have to replace them. get stuff that's not made in china where they cut corners and use unskilled labor, and you'll be fine. -- nomina rutrum rutrum |
#8
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Tires not holding air?
On Tue, 23 Aug 2011 09:22:43 -0700, jim beam > wrote:
>On 08/23/2011 08:51 AM, C. E. White wrote: >> "SC > wrote in message ... >>> >>>>> Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a >>>>> while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a >>>>> liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and >>>>> the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) >>>>> and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak >>>>> is very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked >>>>> loose just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen >>>>> leaks around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. >>>> >>>> I've had one fail like youu are suggesting.....but all four at the same >>>> time? >>>> >>>> Ed >>> >>> LOL, no, not all four. But maybe with the extreme heat of the Florida >>> trip, maybe the stems loosened some? Those aren't the tires that cam on >>> the Fiesta, are they? Or did it come with Kumho's on it? It would be >>> awfully hard to prove, but maybe some damage from the installer? Still >>> hard to make it all four tires/rims though. >> >> Kumhos are the original equipment tires on 2011 SE Fiestas. The car has the >> Ford valve stem attached style of pressure transducers with the replaceable >> rubber valve stems. I have had the same style on two other Fords and never >> had a problem with the stems or tires - but then I never drove back and >> forth to Florida in 100 degree July weather with those vehicles. >> >> The Kumho tires seem decent. At 15K they still look good, don't bump and >> seem grippy enough for NC weather (little snow!). But this realtively fast >> air leaking has be baffled. I guess I need to check them at least weekly >> (they never have "looked" under inflated). >> >> Ed >> >> > >there's a very limited number of possible causes, so let's consider: > >* tires. they're multi-layer, and there are several features designed >to help air retention. one is the bead that contacts the rim. another >is the butyl rubber liner that decreases air permeability. if either of >those have been cheapened, and if you look, you'll see those tires are >made in china, they will indeed lose pressure faster than you're used to. > >* valves and valve stems. the mold seam sealing surface is crucial to >airtightness, and it's easy to screw up with a poor quality molding >machine. same for the seal bands on the valve. > >* the rims. while unlikely, rims, especially cheap cast aluminum, can >be porous. > >you could also of course have a flat - a staple on the freeway will >explain the single "flattest" tire but still be hard to spot. > >but the reason they're all losing air so fast, for my money is either >tires of valves. you can have the latter replaced cheaply enough. if >it's the tires, and it's bugging you bad enough, you'll have to replace >them. get stuff that's not made in china where they cut corners and use >unskilled labor, and you'll be fine. If they are OEM tires go back to the dealer and see what they have to say - the car (and tires)is stil under warranty. |
#9
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Tires not holding air?
SC Tom wrote:
> > "C. E. White" > wrote in message > ... >> I have a strange tire problem...... >> >> I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It >> is the SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on >> alloy wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once >> (and I did check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the >> low tire pressure warning light came on when I was on the way to work. >> I was afraid I had a tire going down, but the car drove normally so I >> continued on to work. As soon as I got to work I looked at the tires >> and all appeared normal. When I got home and checked, the pressure in >> all four tires was in the mid-20s. Weird. I reinflated all the tires >> to 35 psi. All seemed fine for the next 3 weeks or so, until >> yesterday. The low tire pressure light illuminated on the way to work >> again. As before when I looked, the tires seemed fine. As before, when >> I checked the pressure, 3 of the 4 were in the mid 20s, one was in the >> low 20s. I reinflated the tires to 35 again. I've had a lot of cars >> and a lot of tires, and never before have I had a set of tires (four >> tires, not just one) lose 10 pounds of pressure in less than a month. >> >> Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a >> mid July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. >> The trips were quick (600 miles, <10 hours including stops). Is it >> possible I somehow damage the tire structures in such a way that all >> four are now uniformly (more or less) leaking air at a much higher >> rate than normal? Parts of I-95 are really rough, it was really hot, >> and the trip to Florida and back was fairly relentless. >> >> Ed >> > > Some evening (when it's a little cooler out) after driving around for a > while until the tires are good and hot, take a small brush and brush a > liberal amount of water and dish soap solution around the bead areas and > the valve stem (both on the filler valve area and the seal at the rim) > and see if any bubbles form. It may take a little while since the leak > is very slow. I've had leaks before where the filler valve had worked > loose just enough to leak out the way you describe, but I've also seen > leaks around the bead area, but usually on older rims than you have. A 2011 having this problem should have the first step of taking it back to the dealer and having them check it out. Having ALL of the tires drop evenly suggests a fault that should be covered. -- Steve W. |
#10
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Tires not holding air?
On 8/23/2011 8:18 AM, C. E. White wrote:
> I have a strange tire problem...... > > I have a 2011 Ford Fiesta, purchased new in late February of 2011. It is the > SE Hatchback (not SFE) with Kumho Solus KH25 185/60-15 tires on alloy > wheels. For the first 5 months I added air to the tires once (and I did > check them regualrly). In late July, out of the blue, the low tire pressure > warning light came on when I was on the way to work. I was afraid I had a > tire going down, but the car drove normally so I continued on to work. As > soon as I got to work I looked at the tires and all appeared normal. When I > got home and checked, the pressure in all four tires was in the mid-20s. > Weird. I reinflated all the tires to 35 psi. All seemed fine for the next 3 > weeks or so, until yesterday. The low tire pressure light illuminated on the > way to work again. As before when I looked, the tires seemed fine. As > before, when I checked the pressure, 3 of the 4 were in the mid 20s, one was > in the low 20s. I reinflated the tires to 35 again. I've had a lot of cars > and a lot of tires, and never before have I had a set of tires (four tires, > not just one) lose 10 pounds of pressure in less than a month. > > Any thoughts? My only thought is that I somehow damaged the tires on a mid > July trip to Florida. We drove I-95 to South Florida in mid July. The trips > were quick (600 miles,<10 hours including stops). Is it possible I somehow > damage the tire structures in such a way that all four are now uniformly > (more or less) leaking air at a much higher rate than normal? Parts of I-95 > are really rough, it was really hot, and the trip to Florida and back was > fairly relentless. > > Ed All the suggestions given to you are viable that you should check out, but I'd personally *lean* towards the valve stems...at least as the first and cheapest thing to go after. I had the same problem as you, although not with the OEM tires. every time I'd check, they all would be down. I let it go, and then one day I came out and one tire was completely flat. I took it off the car and brought it to a tire shop and they said the stem was no good. Put it back on the car and no more problems...from that tire. The other three kept losing air. So I took the car down to the shop and they replaced the remaining 3 stems and I haven't had a problem since. Funny thing was, the guy asked if I got the tires (set of 4 Michelin) from BJ's. Surprised, I said 'yes' and he said he had gotten a lot of people with the same issue in lately. He said they must have gotten a bad/cheap batch of stems. With yours, I suspect the car and tires are still under warranty? Bring it back to the dealer and let them take care of it. Heck, you may even get a new set of tires out of the deal...They might also have experianced a bunch of customers with the same issue as you... |
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