Thanks for posting your video! That was pretty interesting to watch, we have never tested drilling out the rubber and actually surprised how well it did considering. You did note this at various points of the video but just wanted to note for others that TireJect will seal punctures from a pointed object that is 3/8" in diameter, like a nail. It's not intended to seal a drilled out hole where rubber material has been removed from the tire. I am also curious how much sealant you used, and one little trick we use for large punctures (or in this case actual holes!) is to add a tire plug (or 2). TireJect will seal around the plug and guarantee a leak free seal. TireJect is the only tire sealant that is compatible with tire plugs, others act as a lubricant and prevent the plug from adhering to the rubber. Best of luck and thanks again for posting a video!
I appreciate the response. I had fun shooting it. I admit I set it up for failure by using the drill. Next round I will try just a puncture. It did work better than I thought. I was impressed it even tried to start a patching a hole that size.
I’m wondering what would have happened if you refilled the tire with another dose of tireject. Lots of the stuff blew out on the nail experiment and then more blew out with the drill hole. A plug was being formed and then I think it ran out of liquid to complete the job. I’m curious if a plug built of that size would hold up. I’m glad tireject cleared up the claim which is that it will form a seal around the object rather than the hole that was drilled. I tried this stuff this week on my Argo tire that had weather cracks in it. I’m super impressed with this product and I’ll be putting it in all 8 tires just so I can save myself $300 per tire.
Read the instructions. The tyre should be rotated on the machine, not sit there trying to plug up. The rotation of the tyre seals the hole. Read the instructions. This stuff works.
@@MowerMike so what's your point? Are you trying to say that a nail/screw puncture is synonymous to a hole made by a drill? Someone needs a dose of reality, but I digress. 😉
Kid rock for president 🤘🏽. Tireject everywhere. That hose nipple assembly looked like its a pain. It went in really smooth though. Oh my keep your eye on that nail hole and get squirted. It did work though so big thumbs up.
The tire should be spinning to test this ... just like you were moving and hit a nail ... the liquid rolls around on the inside of the tire.....this test is stupid
@@MowerMike I’ve used this product on my four wheeler and it has done wonders on small punctures. I’ve also used it on old trailer tires and had the same results as you did. Thanks for responding.
@@MowerMike OK so now you admit that your video was "Just for Laffs", and here I thought that you were trying to post a "serious" and informative one. My bad, I'll remember that next time I'm looking to have my leg pulled. 🤪
I'm gonna put this in my lawn mower tires. I really don't think your test did the product 100% justice considering that a puncture does not remove rubber frim the tire as the drill bit does. Your test would have been more accurate if you would have found a 3/8" spike and punctured the tire instead of drilling a hole. But interesting video none the less.
In this test you gave it your best shot according to your perspective. Considering how you went about it, I wonder if you even bothered to read to the instructions. Personally I would have started by letting all the air out of the tire, before removing the stem valve. Then, I would of screwed on the injector/syringe, BEFORE pouring the TireJect into it. If you had done so, you would have avoided all that spilling mess. Once done, and replacing the stem valve and refilling the tire with air, I would have rotated/spun the tire to ensure that the entire tire was totally coated. According to the instructions, one should actually drive the vehicle for several minutes. Perhaps, since you didn't succeed in your first attempt, you might consider trying again. 🤔
@@MowerMike thanks for the suggestion, however even though I could, I'm well beyond that and I would be regressing. I've got better and more lucrative options of making a living. 💲💲
@@ComfyBe For sure don’t go regressing to my level! Set your expectations high my man, only way to go is up from here!!!! Use big words and talk a lot is key to your success (little fortune cookie action for ya)
@@MowerMike, cheers my friend, to each their own. We all attain the level and niche where we belong. As for me, I've aimed high and have hit my mark. My adage is, the only limitations are those one places upon oneself. Afterall, everyone gets to lay in the bed which they make. Hopefully yours suits your level of comfort. I know mine suits me.
Evidently he doesn't know how to read. None of what he did was per instructions. I've just used this stuff for hole in the sidewall of my lawn tractor tire, went by instructions including shaking it before using, and it worked amazing.
😅dude..what university did you say you went to. Common sense tells me the tire should be mounted on the riding mower. Then you inject the sealer in tire and inflate it.spin the tire 10 to fifteen times.then make your 3/8 hole and rotate y😢our tire and wheel some more and you seethat stuff works beyond your expectations not this circus show you were performing....you are hilarious though i give you that.
As long as I got a chuckle. I disagree with your assessment though. This product isn’t something you put in your tire before it blows. Don’t take these videos to serious am just having fun. I am a proud Red Raider from Texas Tech! WRECK’EM!!!!
Come on you are not calling out the obvious flaw in the test. Poking a hole in a tire is way different than boring out a hole with a drill. This stuff never had a chance my man.
Love it. You have some great input. Maybe you can come be a guest on one of my videos! You can just sit there and be negative and contradict everything I do. Kinda like a wife making comments on everything I do wrong lol. Thanks for watching so intensely.
@@MowerMike Just being honest. I don;t bullshit around. I call a turd a turd ... and my friend...this video is a huge turd of a video. Good for a few laughs...but that's about it. Everyone knows for this liquid sealant to fix a tire puncture, the tire needs to be turning so the liquid can flow around the inside of the tire. And to put the sealant in with the valve stem at the 6 o clock position ... soon as I saw that, I thought .. OMG ... this guy has no clue. Sorry ... just an honest review buddy. better luck next time.
Thanks for posting your video! That was pretty interesting to watch, we have never tested drilling out the rubber and actually surprised how well it did considering. You did note this at various points of the video but just wanted to note for others that TireJect will seal punctures from a pointed object that is 3/8" in diameter, like a nail. It's not intended to seal a drilled out hole where rubber material has been removed from the tire. I am also curious how much sealant you used, and one little trick we use for large punctures (or in this case actual holes!) is to add a tire plug (or 2). TireJect will seal around the plug and guarantee a leak free seal. TireJect is the only tire sealant that is compatible with tire plugs, others act as a lubricant and prevent the plug from adhering to the rubber. Best of luck and thanks again for posting a video!
I appreciate the response. I had fun shooting it. I admit I set it up for failure by using the drill. Next round I will try just a puncture. It did work better than I thought. I was impressed it even tried to start a patching a hole that size.
I’m wondering what would have happened if you refilled the tire with another dose of tireject. Lots of the stuff blew out on the nail experiment and then more blew out with the drill hole. A plug was being formed and then I think it ran out of liquid to complete the job.
I’m curious if a plug built of that size would hold up. I’m glad tireject cleared up the claim which is that it will form a seal around the object rather than the hole that was drilled.
I tried this stuff this week on my Argo tire that had weather cracks in it. I’m super impressed with this product and I’ll be putting it in all 8 tires just so I can save myself $300 per tire.
Where can you purchase the tire syringe?
Kid Rock for Senate!!??? 😂 I laughed so hard. This video is awesome
Read the instructions. The tyre should be rotated on the machine, not sit there trying to plug up. The rotation of the tyre seals the hole. Read the instructions. This stuff works.
It won’t work on a hole drilled that size, give it a shot.
@@MowerMike you might be right, but then again have you ever gotten a puncture hole in your tire made by a drill while driving. 🤔 I know I haven't. 🙄
Stupid test .... this guy has no common sense at all .
Worst video ever and stupid laughing for no reason
Follow the directions and it will work,I did the same thing and hasn’t leaked down in a year
It won’t when you drill a hole that size in her. Lol
Tire plug first
@@MowerMike so what's your point? Are you trying to say that a nail/screw puncture is synonymous to a hole made by a drill? Someone needs a dose of reality, but I digress. 😉
Heck yeah keeping those traditional pliers in rotation homie
Bro, this is some awesome entertainment, gave me a great laugh!
Great video!
Haha these are the best comments, all I am after is some giggles here. Thanks for watching
Kid rock for president 🤘🏽. Tireject everywhere. That hose nipple assembly looked like its a pain. It went in really smooth though. Oh my keep your eye on that nail hole and get squirted. It did work though so big thumbs up.
Haha thanks. Kidd Rock is the man! Yep was a messy goofy one for sure
@@MowerMike it seems like the longer you wait the thicker that stuff gets. We guess on the smaller stuff it may be a pretty good solution.
Will it work with tube tires? Like grunt tractor tires.
I doubt it, but don’t know till ya try
Slime makes a tube sealant for tube tires, check it out
The tire should be spinning to test this ... just like you were moving and hit a nail ... the liquid rolls around on the inside of the tire.....this test is stupid
True but then I couldn’t get the splugging blue goo shot.
Tire was left on its side and was not rotating against ground to build up heat. It would have sealed
Worst test I have ever seen ... DUH .. and people let this guy mow their lawns ???
The tire should be positioned so the valve stem is NOT at the bottom ... DUH
How old is that tire?
Hmmm if I had to guess about 15 years old. Put a tube in it after my blue goo test and it works great
@@MowerMike I’ve used this product on my four wheeler and it has done wonders on small punctures. I’ve also used it on old trailer tires and had the same results as you did. Thanks for responding.
I don’t think it’s a fair test.
A puncture is different than a hole that the material is removed.
Total fake news!
@@MowerMike OK so now you admit that your video was "Just for Laffs", and here I thought that you were trying to post a "serious" and informative one. My bad, I'll remember that next time I'm looking to have my leg pulled. 🤪
Probably mush better to screw first than to mess around
But I love messing around ????
I'm gonna put this in my lawn mower tires. I really don't think your test did the product 100% justice considering that a puncture does not remove rubber frim the tire as the drill bit does. Your test would have been more accurate if you would have found a 3/8" spike and punctured the tire instead of drilling a hole. But interesting video none the less.
I completely agree, I was just going for giggles and the blue spluge shot lol
In this test you gave it your best shot according to your perspective. Considering how you went about it, I wonder if you even bothered to read to the instructions. Personally I would have started by letting all the air out of the tire, before removing the stem valve. Then, I would of screwed on the injector/syringe, BEFORE pouring the TireJect into it. If you had done so, you would have avoided all that spilling mess. Once done, and replacing the stem valve and refilling the tire with air, I would have rotated/spun the tire to ensure that the entire tire was totally coated. According to the instructions, one should actually drive the vehicle for several minutes. Perhaps, since you didn't succeed in your first attempt, you might consider trying again. 🤔
Sounds like you need to start making some TH-cam videos.
@@MowerMike thanks for the suggestion, however even though I could, I'm well beyond that and I would be regressing. I've got better and more lucrative options of making a living. 💲💲
@@ComfyBe For sure don’t go regressing to my level! Set your expectations high my man, only way to go is up from here!!!! Use big words and talk a lot is key to your success (little fortune cookie action for ya)
@@MowerMike, cheers my friend, to each their own. We all attain the level and niche where we belong. As for me, I've aimed high and have hit my mark. My adage is, the only limitations are those one places upon oneself. Afterall, everyone gets to lay in the bed which they make. Hopefully yours suits your level of comfort. I know mine suits me.
Thanks god bless
Thanks, not sure how this video helped ya but hope you got some giggles
Evidently he doesn't know how to read.
None of what he did was per instructions.
I've just used this stuff for hole in the sidewall of my lawn tractor tire, went by instructions including shaking it before using, and it worked amazing.
It isn’t reading that is the issue crocker, if I did everything by the book that would be one boring ass video and couldn’t use the term spluge lol.
I could only make it 4 minutes into the video, and felt my iq level falling, had to quit....good luck to all that attempt to watch
Yet you take the time to provide a comment. Thanks for watching, got to start somewhere. I have over 100 more video’s waiting on ya!
with that big of a hole like that the air would not last 5 min.
Right! But it sure makes a great video lol
🙄🙄🙄🤨🤨🤨
Star Wars.... Enterprise. FAIL!
Haha yes I know my jokes are horrible.
😅dude..what university did you say you went to. Common sense tells me the tire should be mounted on the riding mower. Then you inject the sealer in tire and inflate it.spin the tire 10 to fifteen times.then make your 3/8 hole and rotate y😢our tire and wheel some more and you seethat stuff works beyond your expectations not this circus show you were performing....you are hilarious though i give you that.
As long as I got a chuckle. I disagree with your assessment though. This product isn’t something you put in your tire before it blows. Don’t take these videos to serious am just having fun.
I am a proud Red Raider from Texas Tech! WRECK’EM!!!!
THE TIRE SHOULD BE ROLLING with the liquid inside . Dude ... READ the instructions LMAO ... this test is so bogus.
Come on you are not calling out the obvious flaw in the test. Poking a hole in a tire is way different than boring out a hole with a drill. This stuff never had a chance my man.
IN CONCLUSION ... YOU SCREWED UP ... THIS VIDEO IS A JOKE ... YOUR TEST WAS NOT DONE PROPERLY
Love it. You have some great input. Maybe you can come be a guest on one of my videos! You can just sit there and be negative and contradict everything I do. Kinda like a wife making comments on everything I do wrong lol. Thanks for watching so intensely.
@@MowerMike Just being honest. I don;t bullshit around. I call a turd a turd ... and my friend...this video is a huge turd of a video. Good for a few laughs...but that's about it. Everyone knows for this liquid sealant to fix a tire puncture, the tire needs to be turning so the liquid can flow around the inside of the tire. And to put the sealant in with the valve stem at the 6 o clock position ... soon as I saw that, I thought .. OMG ... this guy has no clue. Sorry ... just an honest review buddy. better luck next time.
@@RussaultGaming The video is a win in my book, got a few laughs from ya.
Take that stupid Kid Rock banner down
That is a major negative there. Kid Rock is tha man, just admit it.