Homemade Tire Bead Sealer: 5 Easy Steps To Repairing a Tire With Hair Spray and a Shovel

A few weeks ago, I found myself with a flat tire in the RX8.  The air had been leaking out slowly over a few days, so I assumed that I had a nail in it, as usual. I used these steps to check the tire for an air leak and seal with some homemade tire bead sealer.

For a more in-depth look at how to check a tire for leaks, read this guide

Seal and fix or replace a tire yourself with quality auto parts and tips, like how to made a homemade tire bead sealer, at 1aauto.com
Checking for tire leaks with soapy water

How to Seal a Tire with Homemade Tire Bead Sealer

How to Inspect a Tire for Air Leaks and Seal It

  1. Spray Soapy Water Over the Tire Tread and Look for Bubbles

    Remove the wheel from the vehicle, and spray soapy water all over the tread area of the tire. Watch for bubbles.

    Strangely – I didn’t find an air leak.  So I moved on to step 2, which I had almost forgot existed, because I always find a nail in my tire during step 1.

  2. Spray the Tire Valve Stem with Soapy Water and Look for Bubbles

    Spray the tire valve stem, and the bead of the tire where it meets the wheel with the soapy water. Watch for bubbles.

    The valve stem showed nothing, but when the soapy water pooled around the tire bead/edge of the rim, the bubbles showed their ugly bubble faces. Throughout the entire diameter of the backside of the wheel, air was clearly escaping. Fair enough. No nails for Jeremy this time.

    This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is rx8wheel_5-600x450.jpg

  3. Break the Tire Free from the Wheel so that the Area Leaking Can Be Inspected

    Now, As much as I would love one, I don’t have a fancy tire machine to break the bead of the tire away from the wheel. Normally without a tire machine, this task is nearly an impossible one, but I had a shovel that had different ideas.  

    You may remember this little shovel trick from a while back. If you want it to work, you MUST remove the core of the valve stem. Then you just basically stomp on the shovel like you do in the garden.

    rx8wheel_4

  4. Hop, Skip, and Jump Your Way to Success and the Bead Will Separate from the Rim

    I then shoved some leather welding gloves in there so that I could feel around a bit. Now, at this point I expected to find a bunch of aluminum corrosion causing my slow air leak.  However, in a bizarre plot twist, that was not the case. The rim, other than the slight dent, was in perfect shape. Spotlessly clean aluminum, and the tire itself looked great too. Odd, but sometimes strange things happen in this world.

    rx8wheel_1

  5. Reseal the Tire to the Rim

    Ideally, tire bead sealer should be used, because it works awesome and is intended for this exact situation.  Unfortunately I didn’t have any because I was not that forward thinking, and it was very, very early on a Sunday morning. Improvisation became the name of the game. So I hopped into the other car, and cruised down to the local grocery store for some kind of interesting solution to my dilemma.  As luck would have it, my solution arrived in the form of “Extra Super Hold” hair spray. Yes. I said hair spray.

    I dried the tire and wheel, applied a nice mist of hair spray  to the bead, and filled that tire back up with 32 psi of extra-super-holding lovin’. All day. All over hold. Just read the can.

    It is now over a month later and the tire is still holding air like its job (which it really is).  I have since bought a beautiful new bottle of real tire bead sealer to have ready for next time. As they say, “necessity is the mother of invention”.  Extra super hold hair spray – It’s not just for spiked hair and BMX handle grips anymore.


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Summary
Article Name
Homemade Tire Bead Sealer: Fix a Tire With Hair Spray and a Shovel - 1A Auto
Description
Tire leaking air? Need a quick way to seal a tire? Learn how to seal a tire with this homemade tire bead sealer fix with expert advice in this article.
Author
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1A Auto
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Jeremy Nutt

Hi, I'm Jeremy.

6 thoughts to “Homemade Tire Bead Sealer: 5 Easy Steps To Repairing a Tire With Hair Spray and a Shovel”

  1. This is one great DIY tire repair tip… but I suggest always seek to the experts to avoid more damage on your tire. Again, it’s a great tip and very helpful.

  2. Are you saying that after spraying the bead, you removed the nozzle from hair spray can & aired up the tire with it?

    1. Hi Vicki – Whoa – I wrote this post 6 years ago! Time flies. To answer your question – I just used the hair spray to seal the tire to the wheel. I filled the tire up with air from my air compressor. I sold this car several years ago, and the hair spray ended up holding strong for the following ~3 years that I owned this car. So if you don’t have actual tire bead sealer, I’d say Aqua Net is a great option.

  3. Alum rims notorious for oxidation. That powder residue prevents an air tight seal. Your hair spray is gueing tire up, never tried that. Always used bead sealer or even tar.

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