|
200 Series General Forum for the Volvo 240 and 260 cars |
Information |
|
Refurbishing alloysViews : 1452 Replies : 11Users Viewing This Thread : |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Mar 31st, 2007, 12:31 | #1 |
VOC Member
|
Refurbishing alloys
Hi
the alloys on my 240GLT are in need of attention. One in particular is slowly losing pressure. I know nothing about alloys and so would like advice between replacing and refurbishment. Is refurbishment a stop gap or long term fix? What should I expect to pay? The current ones are the standard GLT 5 spoke, fitted with 185/65/15 s. cheers |
Mar 31st, 2007, 12:43 | #2 |
Member
Last Online: Oct 2nd, 2008 03:28
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: w-s-m
|
is it really the alloy that leaks I had what I thought was a similar problem
well at 1st I thought it was a slow puncture but after having the tyre changed and finding the tyre still losing pressure I found that the old filler valve was faulty and that the tyre place had charged for but not changed the valve. thieving gits !!!! |
Mar 31st, 2007, 16:50 | #3 |
Senior Member
Last Online: Jun 15th, 2014 23:12
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Londinium
|
Provided your wheel is not damaged then having it professionally refurbished is a long term solution.
I've refinished a set of Virgo/GLT alloys myself with paint stripper/simoniz primer/silver/laquer & it is a tough job due to the nooks & crannies of this type of wheel, it is however cheap if you have the time to do it. However, provided you have the cash I'd recommend taking them somewhere to have it done professionally. Seems to be about 30-50 quid a wheel & I'd expect it to be more hard wearing than respraying it yourself. Ben |
Mar 31st, 2007, 22:01 | #4 |
Former contributor
Last Online: Jul 2nd, 2022 07:54
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Rhosgoch, Anglesey
|
If the tyre is loosing pressure it is often through a build up of corrosion on the sealing lip. This is easily rectified - take to your local tyre dealer they will remove tyre clean the corrosion off and this will often enable it to seal - otherwise some bead selaer round the edge will seal it. You'd be looking at £5-10 per wheel that needs it (normally charegd at same price as punctur repair.
Mike
__________________
A Volvo is for life not just for Christmas! |
Apr 1st, 2007, 09:16 | #5 |
Member
Last Online: Apr 25th, 2024 13:39
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Bournemouth
|
I have heard that the alloy can become porous over time resulting in the tyre deflating. On one of my other cars (Lancia - yes I know, sorry) it is an often quoted problem.
Ignoring the fact that Lancias are the motoring equivalent of a soluble aspirin, does anyone know if this has any basis in science or is it just bollox. ) Steve |
Apr 1st, 2007, 15:54 | #6 |
VOC Member
|
I took the car into local tyre shop and they said the alloy had become porous and was causing the airleak, at least on two wheels, and the other two were also poor. I have found a local metal finishers, so off there tomorrow to get a quote.
thanks for advice so far. Outwardly the wheels look ok, ie there is no obvious damage, though the surface is rough and pitted in a couple of places. |
Apr 2nd, 2007, 16:30 | #7 |
Peter D
Last Online: Mar 2nd, 2015 21:03
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Livingston
|
Bead Blasted and Powder coat is the answer. Regards Peter
|
Apr 3rd, 2007, 14:09 | #8 |
VOC Member
|
I've been quoted £110 +Vat to blast clean and powder coat four wheels. Does that seem about the right rate?
|
Apr 6th, 2007, 10:26 | #9 |
VOC Member
Last Online: Apr 22nd, 2024 20:55
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Yorkshire
|
From the quotes I received I would say that is a very good price. I was quoted upwards from £140 for all four.
Roger |
Apr 8th, 2007, 11:39 | #10 |
Senior Member
Last Online: Jun 15th, 2014 23:12
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Londinium
|
+1 on the price.
If you're happy with the work they do would you let us know the name of the company. I'd have my next set done properly at that price. Ben |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|