With my Disco parked within a few metres today, I elected to park it on the edge of the railing, and then lift it down gently :angel:
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even so cant you run tubes in disco rims?
2 or 3 tubes takes up a hell of a lot less space/weight than a second wheel
this is what we orginally were going to do with our defender until we were informed that we would be very lucky to break the bead on an alloy in the bush let alone reseat it....apparently they are notorously hard:(....and even some tyre shops have a hard time with it
exactly! Murphy's law also in my case would dictate that it would travel off the side of the cliff and end up god knows where. dobbo unless you carry a ladder around getting it down by yourself or up can be awkward as it is both heavy and not the ideal shape to carry. Throwing down is an option as long as lands right if it lands wrong it could end up anywhere.
I'm sure you can run tubes; however I'd heard it was hard enough breaking the bead on Disco steel wheels, let alone Defender ones ;) I actually thought it would just be easier (read lazier if you like :angel: ) to just carry a second spare and a tyre repair kit since I've already got an onboard compressor.
Here in lies the reason I changed mine over to tubeless rims. Plug, reinflate and away.
I also carry 3 full spares.
Gotta love a 130.
CC
Awesome idea with steel rims as an emegency stop gap. Only problem being if the hole is toobig the tube would be protruding and exposed too damage. In an emergency if the hole is too big to be plugged i sounds good to me. You'd have to be mighty unlucky to get two punctures you couldn't repair with modern tyre technology strengthing the tyres so much.(unless you own a d3 and have goodyear road tyres on that seem to be made of cheese in the sidewall)
I would just lye it down in the back and tyhey put stuff inside it. I put my recovery stuff in the middle so no area to waste
Sort of like this, But the rim the other way up so you can put stuff in it
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/images/im...11/09/1136.jpg
At a recent field day at the Lismore Rural Fire Service headquarters, I saw a Land Rover defender or series LR with a spare mounted vertically on the Front bulbar--just a thought.