Wind up or what?J.LoSo far I've heard "what a nightmare", get the breakdown service out etc etc.
All this panic could very easily be avoided by being prepared and having a practice run before the million to one chance of a blow out appears.
If you have the following you won't have a nightmare.
1/ Hi viz vest to be seen while fixing the car/van.
2/ Hazard triangle that you can disply 100mtrs towards the flow of traffic from your outfit.
3/ A good wind up torch (you can bet your shirt, batteries will go flat.
4/ A jack that will lift the caravan when the tyre is dead flat, a small 2ton trolley jack or bottle jack are the easiest to operate.
5/ A piece of plywood 20mm thick big enough to put your jack on plus 80mm all round extra, so that you can jack on soft ground.
6/ An extendable wheel wrench to undo those corroded nuts!!!
7/ Your battery drill with suitable socket to drive nuts off and on.
8/ Torque wrench for the final tightening of the nuts.
9/ A clear and practiced plan of actions, as when you get the flat tyre you will undoubtedly be in your sunday best suit and it will be blowing a gale and lashing down with rain at midnight when your the only car on the road.
Seriously though, by planning ahead and practicing a wheel change at home while the van is on the lawn will show up any missing tools required and give you an idea of what is involved.
My brother-in-law drove his jag for 6 months before he found out that there were two sets of wheel locking nuts but only keys for one, when his car had a puncture on the M6 some 140 miles from home. We had to go out with a recovery trailer to get him home. it would of been a simple wheel change had he of done his homework!!!!!!!!
As for tyron bands, we've had several discussions before on them, and I realy fail to see any strong proven evidence that they prevent accidents. You know when a tyre has burst or flat and in any case, no tyre should be re-used after being run flat for any time long or short. Spending your money on good quality correct specification tyre's is a better investment, plus changing your tyres regularly regardless of tread left is also good policy. I change mine every 3 years regardless.
Atb Steve L.
Thanks for all of those answers, we managed to change the tyre on the side of the road with a scissor jack and was not a problem except where to put the jack. Thinking of getting a different jack and will look at those suggested. We are with the AA for the car but not sure it would cover the caravan? Plus it will have taken ages to get to us. Thanks for all yr replies.I had tyron bands fitted by Hometyre, they come and do the job whereever your van is kept. They also fitted new tyres for me. The guy said that the recommended age for changing caravan tyres is between 5 to 7 years, under normal pressures, and 3 to 5 years if over 50 PSI. It also depends on how you store your van over winter, and if you cover the tyres / rotate the wheels frequently.
Caravans don't have shock absorbers, to the loading / cornering forces are different to cars when driving.