Baking Tires?
I need to unglue my tires from the rims. I just read about how to boil them, but my other half doesn't want me putting my nasty ol' tires in a pot of ours. LOL
I thought I remember reading that you can bake them too.(can't find anything about it though) Im leaning towards that if it works and I can just put them on foil. Those of you that have tried or know this method, could you let me know. if it works? what temp? and for how long to bake? Thanks! |
RE: Baking Tires?
If you use the search fetaure, you will find several people boil them. Try it out, and you'll find the pros and cons, and at what temperature.
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RE: Baking Tires?
I've baked them and it worked pretty well. I used a mircowave oven - preheated to 250 degrees C, turned it off and popped the tires in for 15-20 mins. Then i just cracked the tyres off the rim once they were cool enough to handle. If the CA doesn't crystallise immediately you may need to repeat the process more than once.
Suprisingly it didn't stink the house out as i expected it to, athough i did wash and dry the tyres thoroughly beforehand. |
RE: Baking Tires?
ORIGINAL: snowbl!nd I've baked them and it worked pretty well. I used a mircowave oven - preheated to 250 degrees C, turned it off and popped the tires in for 15-20 mins. Then i just cracked the tyres off the rim once they were cool enough to handle. If the CA doesn't crystallise immediately you may need to repeat the process more than once. Suprisingly it didn't stink the house out as i expected it to, athough i did wash and dry the tyres thoroughly beforehand. do you or anyone, know the conversion of 250 celsius to fahrenheit? |
RE: Baking Tires?
i baked at 330 f range and it did stink up the house a lilttle. But no precleaning like suggested. ALso i tried to make some tamiya lunchox tires and that did not work. The rims turned really soft and warped and the glue did not even release at all. [:@]
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RE: Baking Tires?
I prefer boiling. Go to Wal*Mart buy a giant cheap stew pot for $20 and you are set for boiling both for removing tires but also dying plastic parts.
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RE: Baking Tires?
wouldnt it be cheaper/smarter just to buy a new set of rims??
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RE: Baking Tires?
ORIGINAL: binaryterror I prefer boiling. Go to Wal*Mart buy a giant cheap stew pot for $20 and you are set for boiling both for removing tires but also dying plastic parts. I got to thinking, and the temps for baking given in the above posts seem a little high. my thinking was water boils at 212 F. and those temps are quite above that. so I might just bake them at 230F for 15-20 minutes and see how it works. If I do, I'll let ya know how it went. thanks for the replies guys |
RE: Baking Tires?
ORIGINAL: zjwhitrock wouldnt it be cheaper/smarter just to buy a new set of rims?? The rims are on the way. But I need the rubber off the old rims |
RE: Baking Tires?
[b]We're gonna have a fiest tonight! Tires are in the oven![/b]
LOL I put them in @ 250F. we'll see how this goes in 15 minutes :) |
RE: Baking Tires?
Tires are done! I put them in at 250F for 20 minutes total. There was a little rubbery smell, not too bad but I did open a couple windows. anyway, the tires came off nice. I had one spot that didn't come off real easy but with help from my exacto knife, it all worked out. Nothing was melted or warped. so, just wanted to let ya know ;)
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