Sorry if this is a silly question....
I left my house on Thursday morning and returned home on Sunday afternoon. When I pulled in the drive way, my left rear tire on my Chevy K1500 was all the way flat. Sitting on the rim. Dang.
I removed the tire and filled it up at the nearby gas station. Brought a bottle of soap water with me and couldn't find any leaks or bubbles anywhere. These are old aluminum Chevy OEM rims (the 5-star directional rims from the mid-90's) and the tires have approx. 30% tread remaining and are a bit weathered.
This morning, the tire is still at 40psi, where I inflated it to. Can this (especially withh the colder weather) somtimes spontaneously happen? Maybe it lost the bead seat somehow when I was gone?
I left my house on Thursday morning and returned home on Sunday afternoon. When I pulled in the drive way, my left rear tire on my Chevy K1500 was all the way flat. Sitting on the rim. Dang.
I removed the tire and filled it up at the nearby gas station. Brought a bottle of soap water with me and couldn't find any leaks or bubbles anywhere. These are old aluminum Chevy OEM rims (the 5-star directional rims from the mid-90's) and the tires have approx. 30% tread remaining and are a bit weathered.
This morning, the tire is still at 40psi, where I inflated it to. Can this (especially withh the colder weather) somtimes spontaneously happen? Maybe it lost the bead seat somehow when I was gone?