Just wanted to share my recent experience with a puncture in my Continental CSC3.
I have a 2010 R36 - last weekend took it for its 15000k service at the dealership. Was told that I had 2 nails sitting in my rear tyre, which I didn't know about. The tyre pressure had been stable the whole time.
Anyway, went to a nearby tyre shop after the service to have the tyre fixed. When the tyre guy removed the nail, the hole sealed over by itself. The tyre guy started asking me what I had put on the tyre. He then realised that it had the self-sealing Contiseal stuff on it, and he had never seen it before. Told me that I should be right to just drive on it now. Of course, I wasn't. I barely drove 5 minutes when the TPMS started alarming. I returned to the shop and swapped my spare in to get home as he said the tyre was unrepairable.
I brought the tyre to 2 other shops, both of which were stated as stockists on the Continental website. One shop didn't want to touch it as they were not familiar with it. Donnellan's in Box Hill said they could repair it but of course they couldn't. Also want to say that they were extremely rude and just generally unprofessional - definitely wouldn't go back to them again.
At this point in time I was getting quite frustrated - the tyres were still quite new and the puncture was pretty small but nobody seemed to know how to fix it. Finally, called Continental and they referred me to Tyrepower in Bulleen. Just got it done this morning, hope it stays alright. The guys at Tyrepower were great and definitely recommend them.
So if you get a puncture in your Contis, I wouldn't recommend just bringing it to any old tyre shop.
I had JAXQuickfit Tyres in Preston fix mine. They scratched their head initially, but a couple of phone calls to their Conti rep and $40 the tyre was repaired.
I got new CSC3s as the part of the road worthy on our Passat and this is very interesting. Never knew
I reckon this would be better than run flats, but from what drzed said, prob won't last as long if the nail popped out.
How big were the nails drzed? >5mm?
2008 Passat 3.2 Wagon |
2002 A3 1.8T | APR Stage 1| APR Downpipe | APR dogbone | Diesel Geek Shifter | TT pedals | Forge DV | Saikou Michi OCC | NewSouth Boost Gauge | AVUS Rims | Whiteline Rear Swaybar & ALK | N75J | BMC CDA | APR TIP & TB Hose |
Nope it was less than 5mm and the hole appeared to seal over. Anyway, the Conti guy said that their preferred tyre shops are Tyre Power and JaxxQuickfit.
I just fitted a set of these to my MY07 V6 Passat... the same tyre is also available without the sticky stuff inside that is meant to seal the leak (and is a bit cheaper than the one with the magic goo inside).
Nicholas
The other thing to worry with these tyres is to make sure you do not hit anything too hard with them, e.g. pot holes, rocks or the side of gutters as it can damage the size walls, causing for it to form like an egg on the side wall. The tyre is now worthless, not cover by warranty. I learned this lesson the hard way, but I believe all tyres with a low profile can have this problem.
"I learned this lesson the hard way, but I believe all tyres with a low profile can have this problem."
i learn the same lesson the hard way not many weeks ago... went over a roundabout that was higher than usual, and bubbled the tyre.
lucky at least that my spare is full size! the bubble doesn't seen to increase leak, so i'm happy for it to be our spare.
Tony.
2008 Passat 125TDI DSG, Leather.
2007 MkV Golf GTI - APR, 188kW, Leather, Manual.
This is very true. Many ow profile tyres are run at lower than optimal pressures to reduce bump harshness. The problem is that they don't have much give left and so can overstress the sidewalls. You then get delamination and the formation of a bubble where the plies have separated.
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