EldRick said:Good argument for an inflator kit.
EgermP said:In response to the previous comments: My wife was driving. The tire went flat extremely fast, and she was surprised. Fortunately, she was in a residential area and wasn't going very fast when it happened. She thinks that she drove over something. The car has about 250 miles on it.
Chevy showed up in about an hour and towed the car to the dealership. The dealership does not have any spare tires! They have to order a tire, and they say that the new tire will arrive tomorrow. The people at the dealership were friendly and gave my wife a ride home.
This is ridiculous. Dealerships should be required to keep spare tires on hand. In fact, I don't understand why the Chevy road service people don't have them. They should be able to install them on the road.
EgermP said:Here's an update on the flat tire situation:
My wife got a small hole in the tire, and it went completely flat very fast. It was towed on a flatbed truck to the Chevy dealership, who kept it overnight. They replaced the tire with a new tire that is not self-sealing. The dealership says that it will take about three weeks to get a replacement tire that is self-sealing. They charged us $200 for the replacement, which we had no choice except to purchase. The only alternative was to leave the car in the dealership for three weeks waiting for the replacement tire. As I understand the situation, we will probably have to purchase the self-sealing tire when it arrives.
The dealership should stock replacement tires. Plus, if they don't have them in stock, it should not take three weeks to get them. We are not happy campers
Yep. Once of the things I've learned in life is that car dealers are the wrong place to go for tires or for glass repairs.oilerlord said:EgermP said:...you did have a choice. The mistake you made was convincing yourself that this was "tire failure" hoping that your dealer would replace it for free. You could have towed the car to any one of a dozen tire shops that may have had the O.E Michelin Energy Saver A/S tire for your car in stock, or worst case, get it in a day or two.
LeftieBiker said:There are several posts here somewhere, saying that at least the Premiere has room for a small donut spare under the false floor.
Did the dealer show you the puncture itself? Depending upon the type of puncture that you experienced, the self sealing tire technology may not have been sufficient to overcome the puncture you had.EgermP said:Oilerroad wrote: "Why would this be GM's responsibility and/or covered under warranty?"
My answer is simple. The Chevy Bolt salesman said that the car comes with special "self-sealing" tires, which can survive a puncture. As a result, there is no need for a spare or for a tire-inflation-kit. The tire did not survive a puncture as Chevy represented.
EgermP said:My answer is simple. The Chevy Bolt salesman said that the car comes with special "self-sealing" tires, which can survive a puncture. As a result, there is no need for a spare or for a tire-inflation-kit. The tire did not survive a puncture as Chevy represented.
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