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Flat tyres

Loki

Active member
I’ve just driven 82 miles north on the m6 and counted 49 complete tyre treads, full tyres and entire wheels just on the n side. That’s 49 vehicles recently driving with one wheel less than they thought they had on a pretty short section of road!
Is that mildly terrifying?
 

Loki

Active member
I should clarify they were all lying in the centre reservation or on the grass or in hard shoulder.
 

pwhole

Well-known member
I sometimes wonder if it's the driving equivalent of the single old boot found in many lead mines. We drove from Sheffield up the M18/M62 to Goole today and I must have seen at least 30 tyres in a similar situation in each direction. Mind you, when I pointed out to the driver how many there were, he hadn't noticed any of them. At least he's concentrating on the road! ;)
 

tomferry

Well-known member
These chaps left a lot more than that .

Didn’t even finish their gin
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Flotsam

Active member
Some years ago when caving in the Julian Alps between Yugoslavia and Italy we found lots of old boots on what used to be a WW1 battlefield, You could also see where shells had burst on the crags.
 

Ian Ball

Well-known member
It's an interesting thing, I thought it was because the glue used to stick on the treads melted if they go too fast.
 

tomferry

Well-known member
Makes me laugh thinking of them drinking gin at the working face . I wonder why they left a half full bottle their could obviously be other things inside, I didn’t want to touch the cork to smell it as it would perish .
 

wormster

Active member
I went all the way from Oxford to Canterbury and back today, I didn’t see more than a handful of tyres (mostly shredded van/truck type) perhaps it says something about T’hardness of the road “Opp North”, compared with softy shandy drinking Southern roads. Either that or around the M40, M25 etc it’s a stricter clean up policy.
 

pwhole

Well-known member
Yesterday we did the M1 from Nottingham to Sheffield, and I literally lost count before we even got to Bolsover, and I wasn't driving - I'm guessing over 30. At one point I saw five in less than a mile. Most had silt/gravel buildup on their leading side, meaning you couldn't see them as well from the driver's position - if you hit that lot at 70 mph you'd know about it.
 
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