Notices
LS - 3rd Gen (2001-2006) Discussion topics related to the flagship Lexus LS430

Chrome Wheels leaking air

Old Aug 3, 2021 | 10:24 AM
  #1  
gotflute's Avatar
gotflute
Thread Starter
10th Gear
 
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 12
Likes: 2
From: TX
Default Chrome Wheels leaking air

First, loving my new to me 05 LS430 UL. It is the best car I have every owned. Wonderful combination of luxury and sport, and makes the miles melt away on Texas highways. The prices, if you look, are a steal, and it really does feel like a modern car. The goal is to get 500k on it (it has 180k now).

My particular example was maintained very well, but I noticed the tires have trouble keeping air. I have to add about once a week to keep them at pressure. Tire place couldn't find anything, then, when I had oil change done at ClearChoice in Houston (a wonderful independent lexus shop that we are luck to have in Houston, and I recommend to anyone needing service in the Houston area. They use Lexus parts, are all ex Dealership techs, and is close to half the cost of the dealership).
Well, clearchoice told me what a lot of you probably already know: those chome wheels have about a 10 year lifespan, then they can leak air.

The tires probably only have another 10k, but nobody is saying that new tires would "fix" the problem. It is the wheels.

The car has the chrome 18"'s on it.

I looked a little into:
-- getting new aftermarketwheels. I would probably reluctantly go with 17" for price and tire selection, but I like the look and handling of the 18"s. If someone has a compelling argument to go with the 17's, I would be open to it, but not my preference.
-- getting re-manufactered OEM wheels. Seems to run $350 a wheel for the 18's. I already have wheels...seems like an extra step?
-- getting my current wheels repaired. There doesn't seem to be "damage" or wheel rash on these... everything from local shops seemed to point toward powercoating, and, from a quick search, it seems as if Lexus has to send wheels to CA if I go the dealership route. Neither seem ideal to my goals.
-- Trying my luck with new tires on these wheels... perhaps with N2 instead of air...

Is there a easy recommendation I am missing here? Is this just the excuse I need to get new "rims", or, among those of us who like to keep things stock, another option?

Thanks everyone in advance for your time, and I look forward to being a part of the community.
Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 10:46 AM
  #2  
Stu's Avatar
Stu
Racer
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,293
Likes: 64
From: Toronto, Canada
Default

Cheapest route is to take the tires off the wheels and grind the surface where the tire seals with the rim. Once this area is smooth, hit it with a good 2 coats of primer and problem solved, the wheels won't leak air.
Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 11:01 AM
  #3  
gotflute's Avatar
gotflute
Thread Starter
10th Gear
 
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 12
Likes: 2
From: TX
Default

Thanks for the quick and awesome response.

Is this something I could approach an independent shop about having done? Or is this more in the realm of "DIY"?
I do some work on the car, but don't really do "tires".
Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 12:20 PM
  #4  
intermec's Avatar
intermec
Advanced
15 Year Member
Photogenic
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 504
Likes: 54
From: wa
Default

can you spray soapy water to the seal and locate the leak, then have the tire shop help reseal it? sometime they will clean the tire bead.
Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 12:31 PM
  #5  
gotflute's Avatar
gotflute
Thread Starter
10th Gear
 
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 12
Likes: 2
From: TX
Default

Originally Posted by intermec
can you spray soapy water to the seal and locate the leak, then have the tire shop help reseal it? sometime they will clean the tire bead.
The Lexus repair shop did spend some time with it, trying to find the leak, as well as clean the tire beads and reseated all four tires. They came back with a shrug and the comment about how the Chrome wheels have a lifespan then will leak air.

I really like the shop, but, if it ain't in the Lexus repair manual, they won't do it.

I'll call some wheel shops in Houston and see if they do cleaning the mating surface between the wheel and tire, as well as some type of paint or sealer...e

Thanks to you both, and, if anyone has any other advice... I'm all ears.

Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 01:02 PM
  #6  
Stu's Avatar
Stu
Racer
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,293
Likes: 64
From: Toronto, Canada
Default

Originally Posted by gotflute
Thanks for the quick and awesome response.

Is this something I could approach an independent shop about having done? Or is this more in the realm of "DIY"?
I do some work on the car, but don't really do "tires".
Any shop that sells tires or can dismount your tires can do this .... easily. Once done the wheels can be properly resealed. No need to buy new rims, unless you want to.

Lexus dealers won't be willing to help you with this but it's simply done without the need of special equipment. Had it done years ago on chromed Supra wheels and never had a problem .
Reply
Old Aug 3, 2021 | 01:20 PM
  #7  
gotflute's Avatar
gotflute
Thread Starter
10th Gear
 
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 12
Likes: 2
From: TX
Default

Stu:

AWESOME. Thank you!
Already, this forum might have saved me $1k. Money I can put into new tires, after reading the tire thread.

Will try to pay it back by my being active on the forum.

I'll let you know how things work out. I'll contact some local shops.

Thanks all for your responses.

Last edited by gotflute; Aug 4, 2021 at 07:00 AM.
Reply
Old Aug 4, 2021 | 05:41 AM
  #8  
DJB04LS430's Avatar
DJB04LS430
Driver School Candidate
 
Joined: Apr 2021
Posts: 15
Likes: 1
From: NJ
Default

Similar issue here, 2004, was going to try to have the wheels sand blasted and powder coated. Any pitfalls there?
Reply
Old Aug 4, 2021 | 04:18 PM
  #9  
gotflute's Avatar
gotflute
Thread Starter
10th Gear
 
Joined: Mar 2021
Posts: 12
Likes: 2
From: TX
Default

Originally Posted by Stu
Any shop that sells tires or can dismount your tires can do this .... easily. Once done the wheels can be properly resealed. No need to buy new rims, unless you want to.

Lexus dealers won't be willing to help you with this but it's simply done without the need of special equipment. Had it done years ago on chromed Supra wheels and never had a problem .
Seems like the tire shop I went to was more interested in sell me something.

I'll call shops with this in mind and, again, will report back for others that have the same problem (which, on these chrome wheels) should be a lot of us if we are sticking with OEM.
I'm in love with my LS. I think it is one of the best designed cars every made. I plan on keeping mine as stock as make sense
Reply
Old Aug 5, 2021 | 05:15 PM
  #10  
aypues's Avatar
aypues
Instructor
15 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 914
Likes: 70
From: CA
Default

I had mine rechromed 2 years ago by a local wheel shop. Was $150 per wheel back then, and only had to do 3 because I had a brand new spare in the trunk.
Reply
Old Aug 18, 2021 | 11:47 AM
  #11  
StanVanDam's Avatar
StanVanDam
Instructor
15 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,199
Likes: 215
From: Ontario, Canada
Default

I've had 3 of my 5 chrome wheels repaired in the past year, expecting the other 2 to fail any year now. To repair, you need a drill, a set of various-shaped grinding stones drill attachments, sandable metal primer, and 180-220grit sandpaper. See following for the repair guide:

https://www.clublexus.com/forums/whe...with-pics.html

Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
mate01
GS - 2nd Gen (1998-2005)
14
Sep 12, 2016 02:18 PM
DrAtomica
SC - 1st Gen (1992-2000)
9
Apr 22, 2015 01:51 PM
ixtremenet
RX - 2nd Gen (2004-2009)
4
Oct 6, 2014 04:23 PM
ahde
LS - 3rd Gen (2001-2006)
6
Oct 27, 2012 07:10 PM
gjpearce
SC430 - 2nd Gen (2001-2010)
2
Sep 23, 2012 06:47 AM


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 03:54 AM.