Ride On application couldn't be easier. They give you a small tube that fits between the bottle of Ride On and the tire's valve stem and a valve core removal tool.
Step one - position the tire so the valve stem is towards the bottom of the wheel and easily accessible.
Step two - remove the valve stem cap and use the valve core removal tool to unscrew the valve core from the valve stem. This will release the air pressure from the tire so be careful when you are removing the valve core. The escaping air pressure may shoot the core away from you and they are small and easily lost. They can be bought at any tire store or auto parts store if you did happen to lose one.
Step three - cut the tip off the bottle of Ride On, push the installation tube on the bottle and push the opposite end of the tube over the valve stem (after the air has quit rushing out).
Step four - squeeze in the proper amount of Ride On for each size tire you are installing it in. This could take 5 minutes or so per tire as the Ride On is kind of thick and won't just pour out of the bottle and into the tire, you have to squeeze the bottle (multiple times) to force it in. One person reported that microwaving the Ride On for a few seconds heated it up and caused it to thin out a bit for easier installation.
Step five - clean out any excess Ride On from the inside of the valve stem with a pipe cleaner, q-tip, small screwdriver, etc.
Step six - re-install the valve core into the valve stem with valve core tool.
Step seven - air the tire up to the proper pressure.
Step eight - do the break in / Ride On distribution ride that is detailed in the instructions to allow the Ride On to flow around the inside of the tire. Initially the ride will feel very shaky as the Ride On is sitting in one big blob at the bottom of the tire but after about 15 - 30 minutes of riding, it will spread out inside the tire and the ride will smooth out.
Fix A Flat and Ride On are not the same thing. Ride On is not a "side of the road flat repair" like Fix A Flat is. Also, some people have reported that Ride On actually improves the tires balance and some are now running with no wheel weights, using just the Ride On to maintain their tire balance.
If I had problems with slow leaks on otherwise good tires, I would try using nitrogen. For the most part, I haven't had tire pressure issues so I'm not anxious to spend the extra money on something I don't have a problem with right now. (Plus you have to drive around with those funky green valve stem caps

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