JimInAllen
Well-Known Member
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Not one, but two tires....happy days.
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OK.. So you got to explain how you Macgyver'd that one.lost brake pressure on the truck.
a rock crushed and split the brake line. fixed it temporarily with a golf tee.

Awesome! Time to upgrade!Not one, but two tires....happy days.
Nice fix. ? It would never have occurred to use a golf tee.i cut the line off flush
jammed the gold tee into it, then did two folds of the line.
the folds greatly reduce the pressure the golf tee had to hold back.
i filled with borrowed brake fluid and it held up
Always keep a small set of vice grips in the glove box. On more than one occasion cut, crimped and folded broken or leaking brake lines that were toast. Off roading 101 hacksi cut the line off flush
jammed the golf tee into it, then did two folds of the line.
the folds greatly reduce the pressure the golf tee had to hold back.
i filled with borrowed brake fluid and it held up
If you know what/when/where etc, it may be worth a call to the police, and local Roads Department to check for info on what may have led to this. Lots of possibilities that may come with "at fault" of someone else, and help off-set your costs.Not one, but two tires....happy days.
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Or to the “really real” Cherokee from the ‘70s…Hit a segment of truck tire retread that came off in front of me in traffic once with my previous car(‘17 Cherokee Trailhawk). It slung up under the tire, destroying a corner of the front bumper in the process, ripped out the parking proximity sensor wiring, shredded the tire, and who know what all other sensors. For an “off-road” marketed vehicle it sure was fragile and unprotected… Probably would have never happened to a real Cherokee from the early 2000’s.