mga bossing, marahil heto na ang pinaka newbie na question? meron na po bang spare tire ang new car.. hehehe.. dagdag ko na rin.. kasama na ba mga tools like jack, etc. thanks po.
mga bossing, marahil heto na ang pinaka newbie na question? meron na po bang spare tire ang new car.. hehehe.. dagdag ko na rin.. kasama na ba mga tools like jack, etc. thanks po.
hmmm.. i guess if you can buy bmw that means you can afford to have spare tire easily ;)
That's odd (BMW post). All come with spare tire (jack and standard tools). Meron pa ngang trunk-mounted tool box ang mga BMW units. If there may be some distinction sa kind of spare tire, others (usually CBU units) come with DONUT TIRES while locally assembled in either alloy wheel or steel rims but in full-sized tire.
BMWs now come with run-flat tires. No spare. You can tell if your BMW has run-flats... they ride like **** compared to regular tires... though on newer models with run-flats, the ride is not as bad, anymore. It was worst on the first 1-series cars and X3s with run-flats, though the run-flats on the 320i I tried last would still shake the fillings out of your teeth when you went over cobbles.
MINIs overseas come with run-flats. The local ones, at least the non-Cooper S variants come with regular tires with a spare. I was told the Cooper S's exhaust interferes with the mounting point for the spare, which is why they couldn't fit one. But instead of run-flats, they give you the regular Bridgestones and a can of fix-a-flat, much like Mazda does with the MX-5. This saves both the customer and the dealer from the additional cost and hassle of having run-flats.
If you really need to know, you can ask. But most non-luxury cars come with spare tires. Most of them now use donut tires to save space, but these are safe to use, even for distances of 100 kilometers, as long as you keep your speeds low (under 80 km/h).
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Or for sedans, you can just pop the trunk where the spares are usually placed.
Para hindi din makaisip yung agent na newbie kayo at maloloko niya kayo.
Kapag AUVs, SUVs or MPVs, usually it's under the car unless attached at the back.
If you are buying typical cars typically under the P2M price range, yes, it will have a spare tire and tools/jack included.
"typical" cars would be similar to civic, altis, jazz, innova, crv, focus, accent, elantra, soul, fortuner, montero, accord, etc.
Cars that may not have a spare tire would be because they are using run-flat tires. But these are usually in very expensive luxury brand cars like BMW, fitted either as standard or options.
opo, meron spare tire, mags, at tools
dati pa nga, meron touch-up paint nasa maliit na lata ... hindi na yata uso ito ngayon
Yup. Biggest pet peeve with so-called luxury cars... getting your back pummeled with hammers over rumble strips is not "luxury"... :hysterical:
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^ grabe pala RFT, hindi k pa nasusubukan eh. heheIn time naman madedevelop pa yan para comfy pa rin ride kahit na RFT na gamit.![]()
Fasten your seatbelt! Or else...Driven To Thrill!
many thanks guys.. my wife goes back to the dealer today... hopefully she can bring home the car..
thanks for your inputs again![]()
Iyong Grand Starex namin,- donut tyre ang spare.....If you really need to know, you can ask. But most non-luxury cars come with spare tires. Most of them now use donut tires to save space, but these are safe to use, even for distances of 100 kilometers, as long as you keep your speeds low (under 80 km/h).
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