AFAIK, Stefan did Madigans. Not sure which direction.
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I never needed a 2nd spare. I carry two inner tubes and five 15x15cm repair patches these days.
I staked 2 at once the other week that no sticky plugs would fix (i tried). Lucky i was less than a km from home, but......
If your non LR rims, changing a tyre is somewhat easier than with LR rims, genuine ones hold on at the bead extremely well.
I did Madigan's with a group and the lead vehicle (a D2) got 2 punctures yet only had 1 spare although he carried a spare carcass and tubes. He'd never changed a tyre before, indeed no-one but I had, but at least he carried Tyrepliers for the D2 alloys.
We did a year of remote travel in 2014 , I carried a spare carcass and never used it. Would be repairing tyres sometimes 3 nights in row but each to their own, I wouldn’t bother again.
Learn how to repair your tyres is a better skill to carry
I’ve always carried a second spare when going to remote areas, but since making the move from split rims and tubes to tubeless 10years ago and running sensible pressures off highway I’ve never needed the second spare. Last time I had a flat it was repaired without removing the rim from the car.
So unless I’m scrub bashing in remote areas I don’t think a second spare is essential, provided you have a repair kit.
Cheers
Steve
Two simultaneous flat BFG ATs on the rear of our D1 towing our camper on a stony road near the Lion's Den hotel near Cooktown, both repairable.
I always carried two spares or a spare carcass when I had the d3 mostly because I would have been waiting for a long time to get 255/60-18 AT tyres any further west than Parramatta (this was circa 2010-2012. Never used them and did the Simpson west to east and the Hay river track and only plugged one tyre.
The 130 has two brand new MTRs on wolf rims on the headboard. I've never used even one and have plugged a few leaky tyres to get me home.
Regards,
Tote