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Will this tyre fail its MOT?


How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewallIs this tyre damage a problem?Do I Need To Change the Tire If the Sidewall Is Damaged Like This?Should this tire be replaced?Damaged sidewall - is this safe or should i replace?Slight scrape/cut along sidewall of tire after hitting curbCut in tyre sidewall - repair or replace?Tire damage needing replacement?Do I Need To Change the Tire If the Sidewall Is Damaged Like This? Is this cosmetic or safety hazard?Tyre sidewall damage. Safe to drive or replace ASAP?Is this superficial tire damage or should it be replaced?






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margin-bottom:0;









3

















enter image description here
It's a smallish cut on the sidewall, and I don't think it goes deep enough to reach the cords.
Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • 4





    You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

    – user3445853
    Jul 17 at 19:11






  • 6





    MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

    – Criggie
    Jul 17 at 19:52






  • 2





    Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 18 at 11:22






  • 1





    Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

    – Ian W
    Jul 19 at 22:40






  • 1





    Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 20 at 22:13

















3

















enter image description here
It's a smallish cut on the sidewall, and I don't think it goes deep enough to reach the cords.
Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • 4





    You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

    – user3445853
    Jul 17 at 19:11






  • 6





    MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

    – Criggie
    Jul 17 at 19:52






  • 2





    Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 18 at 11:22






  • 1





    Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

    – Ian W
    Jul 19 at 22:40






  • 1





    Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 20 at 22:13













3












3








3


1






enter image description here
It's a smallish cut on the sidewall, and I don't think it goes deep enough to reach the cords.
Thanks.










share|improve this question

















enter image description here
It's a smallish cut on the sidewall, and I don't think it goes deep enough to reach the cords.
Thanks.







wheels sidewall-damage inspection






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 18 at 11:44









uɐɪ

2731 silver badge5 bronze badges




2731 silver badge5 bronze badges










asked Jul 17 at 9:00









Paul CameronPaul Cameron

161 silver badge2 bronze badges




161 silver badge2 bronze badges










  • 4





    You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

    – user3445853
    Jul 17 at 19:11






  • 6





    MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

    – Criggie
    Jul 17 at 19:52






  • 2





    Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 18 at 11:22






  • 1





    Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

    – Ian W
    Jul 19 at 22:40






  • 1





    Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 20 at 22:13












  • 4





    You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

    – user3445853
    Jul 17 at 19:11






  • 6





    MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

    – Criggie
    Jul 17 at 19:52






  • 2





    Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 18 at 11:22






  • 1





    Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

    – Ian W
    Jul 19 at 22:40






  • 1





    Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

    – Paul Cameron
    Jul 20 at 22:13







4




4





You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

– user3445853
Jul 17 at 19:11





You've clearly never seen a tire blow up, or you wouldn't bother asking. I've had a (4-wheeled) wheelbarrow tire blow up while parked, it broke the ABS rim off and projected it over a 4m high wall after having bounced off a patio and a wall. Now imagine what if it wasn't stationary but driving in a busy city or motorway; and not a 10inch diameter wheel but a full car size. The only way this question makes sense if you don't have time to replace it before the MOT; but even then.

– user3445853
Jul 17 at 19:11




6




6





MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

– Criggie
Jul 17 at 19:52





MOT implies the UK as a location - is that correct ? Different locations have different rules.

– Criggie
Jul 17 at 19:52




2




2





Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

– Paul Cameron
Jul 18 at 11:22





Hi guys, thanks very much for your answers. I will definitely get it replaced, its just I have the MOT tomorrow so did not have time to replace it beforehand

– Paul Cameron
Jul 18 at 11:22




1




1





Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

– Ian W
Jul 19 at 22:40





Would love to hear the outcome of the MOT and also if the inspector explicitly identified the cut (or you asked) and if it was OK as-is.

– Ian W
Jul 19 at 22:40




1




1





Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

– Paul Cameron
Jul 20 at 22:13





Hi , the car failed it's mot on cv boots but the inspector didn't even mention the tire

– Paul Cameron
Jul 20 at 22:13










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















14


















If you can't see or feel the cords by lifting the edge of the cut with a blunt instrument (e.g. a coffee stirrer), then it shouldn't fail:




  • any ply or cord that can be seen without touching the tyre – fail


  • if by folding back rubber or opening a cut with a blunt instrument, so as not to cause further damage, exposed ply or cord can be seen irrespective of the size of the cut – fail


  • if a cut which is more than 25mm or 10% of the section width whichever is the greater, is opened with a blunt instrument and cords can be felt but not seen – fail



Source: UK MOT manual



However I'd still seriously think about replacing it, as it will have seriously weakened the sidewall, significantly increasing the risk of a blow-out.






share|improve this answer























  • 3





    I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

    – GdD
    Jul 17 at 14:32






  • 2





    Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

    – Ian W
    Jul 17 at 23:41











  • @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

    – Nick C
    Jul 18 at 8:37











  • Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

    – Ian W
    Jul 18 at 8:43






  • 1





    @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

    – Nick C
    Jul 18 at 11:46


















3


















This question's answer How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewall probably best answers your question. I am blocked from accessing the link as outside the UK - relevant part of the testers' manual.



I think @Nick-C's advice applies to the tread, not the sidewall.



What I can tell you is that in (litigious) North America, most tire shops would refuse to even attempt to repair.



TireRack.com says:




Tires cut or punctured in the shoulder or sidewall areas, as well as any tires driven on while flat or with very low inflation pressure even for short periods of time are often damaged beyond repair and should be replaced. Driving on a tire while flat or with very low inflation pressure will permanently weaken the tire's internal structure, rendering it more susceptible to catastrophic failure.




Kaltire.com says:




But on the sidewall, those cords aren’t there. So, there’s just no way for a plug to fill that hole. The patch won’t hold, and it’s going to continue to leak.




In fact, I took in a tire that had a small ( < 0.5") screw still stuck in the side and they would not even touch it. Maybe they were trying to see me a new tire, but why would you risk a blowout?



Also, that's not a "smallish cut"; that's severe and has clearly compromised the integrity of the sidewall.



btw: every time you go over a bump in the road, the stress is transferred/absorbed via the sidewall first, which makes it more stressed than a patch on the tread.






share|improve this answer



































    1


















    I personally would take it off, put the spare on, take the wheel and tyre to the service garage and get them to change it ASAP, I wouldn’t even drive to the garage with it on, if that goes whilst driving you are risking yourself and others.






    share|improve this answer

































      -1


















      I'm an mot tester. The mot standard is the minimum requirement to be Road worthy just because you have an mot and it passes doesn't mean nothing will happen within 12 months till the next mot. That tyre will only fail if there are cords exposed or ply! Or if the vehicle examiner thinks that the cut is deep enough to reach the ply or cords, on the view of the picture I would advise would need the car and tyre in front of me to give a better judgment. My advise is to change the tyre anyway before the mot safety reasons thanks.






      share|improve this answer

































        -2


















        I'm a tyre fitter and here in Northern Ireland that would be a fail as its a damaged side wall. And tbh if u value ur life I wouldn't be driving to fast on it.. If u want to risk it glue it back into place






        share|improve this answer



























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          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

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          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          14


















          If you can't see or feel the cords by lifting the edge of the cut with a blunt instrument (e.g. a coffee stirrer), then it shouldn't fail:




          • any ply or cord that can be seen without touching the tyre – fail


          • if by folding back rubber or opening a cut with a blunt instrument, so as not to cause further damage, exposed ply or cord can be seen irrespective of the size of the cut – fail


          • if a cut which is more than 25mm or 10% of the section width whichever is the greater, is opened with a blunt instrument and cords can be felt but not seen – fail



          Source: UK MOT manual



          However I'd still seriously think about replacing it, as it will have seriously weakened the sidewall, significantly increasing the risk of a blow-out.






          share|improve this answer























          • 3





            I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

            – GdD
            Jul 17 at 14:32






          • 2





            Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

            – Ian W
            Jul 17 at 23:41











          • @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 8:37











          • Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

            – Ian W
            Jul 18 at 8:43






          • 1





            @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 11:46















          14


















          If you can't see or feel the cords by lifting the edge of the cut with a blunt instrument (e.g. a coffee stirrer), then it shouldn't fail:




          • any ply or cord that can be seen without touching the tyre – fail


          • if by folding back rubber or opening a cut with a blunt instrument, so as not to cause further damage, exposed ply or cord can be seen irrespective of the size of the cut – fail


          • if a cut which is more than 25mm or 10% of the section width whichever is the greater, is opened with a blunt instrument and cords can be felt but not seen – fail



          Source: UK MOT manual



          However I'd still seriously think about replacing it, as it will have seriously weakened the sidewall, significantly increasing the risk of a blow-out.






          share|improve this answer























          • 3





            I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

            – GdD
            Jul 17 at 14:32






          • 2





            Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

            – Ian W
            Jul 17 at 23:41











          • @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 8:37











          • Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

            – Ian W
            Jul 18 at 8:43






          • 1





            @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 11:46













          14














          14










          14









          If you can't see or feel the cords by lifting the edge of the cut with a blunt instrument (e.g. a coffee stirrer), then it shouldn't fail:




          • any ply or cord that can be seen without touching the tyre – fail


          • if by folding back rubber or opening a cut with a blunt instrument, so as not to cause further damage, exposed ply or cord can be seen irrespective of the size of the cut – fail


          • if a cut which is more than 25mm or 10% of the section width whichever is the greater, is opened with a blunt instrument and cords can be felt but not seen – fail



          Source: UK MOT manual



          However I'd still seriously think about replacing it, as it will have seriously weakened the sidewall, significantly increasing the risk of a blow-out.






          share|improve this answer
















          If you can't see or feel the cords by lifting the edge of the cut with a blunt instrument (e.g. a coffee stirrer), then it shouldn't fail:




          • any ply or cord that can be seen without touching the tyre – fail


          • if by folding back rubber or opening a cut with a blunt instrument, so as not to cause further damage, exposed ply or cord can be seen irrespective of the size of the cut – fail


          • if a cut which is more than 25mm or 10% of the section width whichever is the greater, is opened with a blunt instrument and cords can be felt but not seen – fail



          Source: UK MOT manual



          However I'd still seriously think about replacing it, as it will have seriously weakened the sidewall, significantly increasing the risk of a blow-out.







          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Jul 18 at 8:36

























          answered Jul 17 at 9:47









          Nick CNick C

          26.8k5 gold badges48 silver badges96 bronze badges




          26.8k5 gold badges48 silver badges96 bronze badges










          • 3





            I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

            – GdD
            Jul 17 at 14:32






          • 2





            Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

            – Ian W
            Jul 17 at 23:41











          • @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 8:37











          • Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

            – Ian W
            Jul 18 at 8:43






          • 1





            @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 11:46












          • 3





            I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

            – GdD
            Jul 17 at 14:32






          • 2





            Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

            – Ian W
            Jul 17 at 23:41











          • @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 8:37











          • Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

            – Ian W
            Jul 18 at 8:43






          • 1





            @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

            – Nick C
            Jul 18 at 11:46







          3




          3





          I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

          – GdD
          Jul 17 at 14:32





          I agree, don't think MOT, think safety.

          – GdD
          Jul 17 at 14:32




          2




          2





          Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

          – Ian W
          Jul 17 at 23:41





          Where did the bullet items come from? Please provide source; sounds "official".

          – Ian W
          Jul 17 at 23:41













          @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

          – Nick C
          Jul 18 at 8:37





          @IanW Sorry, my bad - I've added the link

          – Nick C
          Jul 18 at 8:37













          Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

          – Ian W
          Jul 18 at 8:43





          Thx. Same as in other post I referenced and can't bread as outside UK. Can you read further to see if it's applicable to the treads and / or sidewall? Totally different characteristics and tolerances.

          – Ian W
          Jul 18 at 8:43




          1




          1





          @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

          – Nick C
          Jul 18 at 11:46





          @IanW The manual doesn't actually mention sidewalls at all, so I can only assume they intend the same rule to apply to both...

          – Nick C
          Jul 18 at 11:46













          3


















          This question's answer How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewall probably best answers your question. I am blocked from accessing the link as outside the UK - relevant part of the testers' manual.



          I think @Nick-C's advice applies to the tread, not the sidewall.



          What I can tell you is that in (litigious) North America, most tire shops would refuse to even attempt to repair.



          TireRack.com says:




          Tires cut or punctured in the shoulder or sidewall areas, as well as any tires driven on while flat or with very low inflation pressure even for short periods of time are often damaged beyond repair and should be replaced. Driving on a tire while flat or with very low inflation pressure will permanently weaken the tire's internal structure, rendering it more susceptible to catastrophic failure.




          Kaltire.com says:




          But on the sidewall, those cords aren’t there. So, there’s just no way for a plug to fill that hole. The patch won’t hold, and it’s going to continue to leak.




          In fact, I took in a tire that had a small ( < 0.5") screw still stuck in the side and they would not even touch it. Maybe they were trying to see me a new tire, but why would you risk a blowout?



          Also, that's not a "smallish cut"; that's severe and has clearly compromised the integrity of the sidewall.



          btw: every time you go over a bump in the road, the stress is transferred/absorbed via the sidewall first, which makes it more stressed than a patch on the tread.






          share|improve this answer
































            3


















            This question's answer How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewall probably best answers your question. I am blocked from accessing the link as outside the UK - relevant part of the testers' manual.



            I think @Nick-C's advice applies to the tread, not the sidewall.



            What I can tell you is that in (litigious) North America, most tire shops would refuse to even attempt to repair.



            TireRack.com says:




            Tires cut or punctured in the shoulder or sidewall areas, as well as any tires driven on while flat or with very low inflation pressure even for short periods of time are often damaged beyond repair and should be replaced. Driving on a tire while flat or with very low inflation pressure will permanently weaken the tire's internal structure, rendering it more susceptible to catastrophic failure.




            Kaltire.com says:




            But on the sidewall, those cords aren’t there. So, there’s just no way for a plug to fill that hole. The patch won’t hold, and it’s going to continue to leak.




            In fact, I took in a tire that had a small ( < 0.5") screw still stuck in the side and they would not even touch it. Maybe they were trying to see me a new tire, but why would you risk a blowout?



            Also, that's not a "smallish cut"; that's severe and has clearly compromised the integrity of the sidewall.



            btw: every time you go over a bump in the road, the stress is transferred/absorbed via the sidewall first, which makes it more stressed than a patch on the tread.






            share|improve this answer






























              3














              3










              3









              This question's answer How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewall probably best answers your question. I am blocked from accessing the link as outside the UK - relevant part of the testers' manual.



              I think @Nick-C's advice applies to the tread, not the sidewall.



              What I can tell you is that in (litigious) North America, most tire shops would refuse to even attempt to repair.



              TireRack.com says:




              Tires cut or punctured in the shoulder or sidewall areas, as well as any tires driven on while flat or with very low inflation pressure even for short periods of time are often damaged beyond repair and should be replaced. Driving on a tire while flat or with very low inflation pressure will permanently weaken the tire's internal structure, rendering it more susceptible to catastrophic failure.




              Kaltire.com says:




              But on the sidewall, those cords aren’t there. So, there’s just no way for a plug to fill that hole. The patch won’t hold, and it’s going to continue to leak.




              In fact, I took in a tire that had a small ( < 0.5") screw still stuck in the side and they would not even touch it. Maybe they were trying to see me a new tire, but why would you risk a blowout?



              Also, that's not a "smallish cut"; that's severe and has clearly compromised the integrity of the sidewall.



              btw: every time you go over a bump in the road, the stress is transferred/absorbed via the sidewall first, which makes it more stressed than a patch on the tread.






              share|improve this answer
















              This question's answer How to assess the severity of a cut on a tyre sidewall probably best answers your question. I am blocked from accessing the link as outside the UK - relevant part of the testers' manual.



              I think @Nick-C's advice applies to the tread, not the sidewall.



              What I can tell you is that in (litigious) North America, most tire shops would refuse to even attempt to repair.



              TireRack.com says:




              Tires cut or punctured in the shoulder or sidewall areas, as well as any tires driven on while flat or with very low inflation pressure even for short periods of time are often damaged beyond repair and should be replaced. Driving on a tire while flat or with very low inflation pressure will permanently weaken the tire's internal structure, rendering it more susceptible to catastrophic failure.




              Kaltire.com says:




              But on the sidewall, those cords aren’t there. So, there’s just no way for a plug to fill that hole. The patch won’t hold, and it’s going to continue to leak.




              In fact, I took in a tire that had a small ( < 0.5") screw still stuck in the side and they would not even touch it. Maybe they were trying to see me a new tire, but why would you risk a blowout?



              Also, that's not a "smallish cut"; that's severe and has clearly compromised the integrity of the sidewall.



              btw: every time you go over a bump in the road, the stress is transferred/absorbed via the sidewall first, which makes it more stressed than a patch on the tread.







              share|improve this answer















              share|improve this answer




              share|improve this answer








              edited Jul 18 at 9:11

























              answered Jul 17 at 23:55









              Ian WIan W

              1354 bronze badges




              1354 bronze badges
























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                  I personally would take it off, put the spare on, take the wheel and tyre to the service garage and get them to change it ASAP, I wouldn’t even drive to the garage with it on, if that goes whilst driving you are risking yourself and others.






                  share|improve this answer






























                    1


















                    I personally would take it off, put the spare on, take the wheel and tyre to the service garage and get them to change it ASAP, I wouldn’t even drive to the garage with it on, if that goes whilst driving you are risking yourself and others.






                    share|improve this answer




























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                      I personally would take it off, put the spare on, take the wheel and tyre to the service garage and get them to change it ASAP, I wouldn’t even drive to the garage with it on, if that goes whilst driving you are risking yourself and others.






                      share|improve this answer














                      I personally would take it off, put the spare on, take the wheel and tyre to the service garage and get them to change it ASAP, I wouldn’t even drive to the garage with it on, if that goes whilst driving you are risking yourself and others.







                      share|improve this answer













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                      answered Jul 18 at 13:22









                      SteveSteve

                      111 bronze badge




                      111 bronze badge
























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                          I'm an mot tester. The mot standard is the minimum requirement to be Road worthy just because you have an mot and it passes doesn't mean nothing will happen within 12 months till the next mot. That tyre will only fail if there are cords exposed or ply! Or if the vehicle examiner thinks that the cut is deep enough to reach the ply or cords, on the view of the picture I would advise would need the car and tyre in front of me to give a better judgment. My advise is to change the tyre anyway before the mot safety reasons thanks.






                          share|improve this answer






























                            -1


















                            I'm an mot tester. The mot standard is the minimum requirement to be Road worthy just because you have an mot and it passes doesn't mean nothing will happen within 12 months till the next mot. That tyre will only fail if there are cords exposed or ply! Or if the vehicle examiner thinks that the cut is deep enough to reach the ply or cords, on the view of the picture I would advise would need the car and tyre in front of me to give a better judgment. My advise is to change the tyre anyway before the mot safety reasons thanks.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              -1














                              -1










                              -1









                              I'm an mot tester. The mot standard is the minimum requirement to be Road worthy just because you have an mot and it passes doesn't mean nothing will happen within 12 months till the next mot. That tyre will only fail if there are cords exposed or ply! Or if the vehicle examiner thinks that the cut is deep enough to reach the ply or cords, on the view of the picture I would advise would need the car and tyre in front of me to give a better judgment. My advise is to change the tyre anyway before the mot safety reasons thanks.






                              share|improve this answer














                              I'm an mot tester. The mot standard is the minimum requirement to be Road worthy just because you have an mot and it passes doesn't mean nothing will happen within 12 months till the next mot. That tyre will only fail if there are cords exposed or ply! Or if the vehicle examiner thinks that the cut is deep enough to reach the ply or cords, on the view of the picture I would advise would need the car and tyre in front of me to give a better judgment. My advise is to change the tyre anyway before the mot safety reasons thanks.







                              share|improve this answer













                              share|improve this answer




                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Jul 18 at 16:38









                              Steven brownSteven brown

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                                  I'm a tyre fitter and here in Northern Ireland that would be a fail as its a damaged side wall. And tbh if u value ur life I wouldn't be driving to fast on it.. If u want to risk it glue it back into place






                                  share|improve this answer






























                                    -2


















                                    I'm a tyre fitter and here in Northern Ireland that would be a fail as its a damaged side wall. And tbh if u value ur life I wouldn't be driving to fast on it.. If u want to risk it glue it back into place






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                                      -2









                                      I'm a tyre fitter and here in Northern Ireland that would be a fail as its a damaged side wall. And tbh if u value ur life I wouldn't be driving to fast on it.. If u want to risk it glue it back into place






                                      share|improve this answer














                                      I'm a tyre fitter and here in Northern Ireland that would be a fail as its a damaged side wall. And tbh if u value ur life I wouldn't be driving to fast on it.. If u want to risk it glue it back into place







                                      share|improve this answer













                                      share|improve this answer




                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered Jul 18 at 15:00









                                      S J MCILHATTONS J MCILHATTON

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