Was away on a cross country flight, on the ground for about 2 hours, and when I walked back to the RV, I noticed my left main tire was fully deflated! By great luck, I was visiting another RV builder, and he had an air compressor and tire inflator in his shop. So I filled it back up and determined the air loss was gradual and that I had enough time to return home.
Got a new tire and tube installed now, but I'm puzzled about the cause of the deflation. Happened out of nowhere. My previous landings were not particularly rough. And no visible damage to the tire surface or punctures. The grooves in the tire tread are still about 5/64" deep (compared to about 11/64" on a new tire). I flew my previous tires down to the point where there was no groove left at all. I even inflated the tube and held it under water in a swimming pool and no bubbles, so the leak must be extraordinarily tiny. Should I agonize over figuring this out or just toss the old tire and forget about it?
Tire is Goodyear Flight Special II 5.00-5, tube is an original stock Vans tube.
At least lesson learned to keep a portable tire pump in my flight bag from now on.
Got a new tire and tube installed now, but I'm puzzled about the cause of the deflation. Happened out of nowhere. My previous landings were not particularly rough. And no visible damage to the tire surface or punctures. The grooves in the tire tread are still about 5/64" deep (compared to about 11/64" on a new tire). I flew my previous tires down to the point where there was no groove left at all. I even inflated the tube and held it under water in a swimming pool and no bubbles, so the leak must be extraordinarily tiny. Should I agonize over figuring this out or just toss the old tire and forget about it?
Tire is Goodyear Flight Special II 5.00-5, tube is an original stock Vans tube.
At least lesson learned to keep a portable tire pump in my flight bag from now on.