A slow leak is the quietest problem in the shop and the one most likely to come back. The customer says it loses a few pounds a week, you air it up, spin it, eyeball the tread, and find nothing. Three days later the low-pressure light is on again and now they are annoyed. The leak was there the whole time. You just could not see it.
Why the dunk tank lets slow leaks hide
The tank finds a fast leak fine. A slow one is another story. You can only submerge part of the assembly at a time, the water hides the smallest bubbles, and a weep at the valve or a hairline at the bead can sit just above the waterline while you are staring at the tread. The tank is also slow: pull the wheel, carry it over, dunk it, dry it, and you have spent ten minutes to confirm what a targeted test shows in one. On a busy day, that is a bay you are not turning.
Where slow leaks actually come from
Most slow leaks are not punctures in the tread. They are at the four spots a spray finds fastest:
- The valve core, a slow weep that rarely shows in water.
- The bead seat, especially on corroded, curb-rashed, or aftermarket wheels.
- The valve stem base where it meets the wheel.
- A TPMS sensor seal, easy to disturb during a mount and easy to miss after.
Every one of those is a small surface you can target directly. That is exactly why a spray-on detector beats a tank for the leaks customers actually complain about.
Spray it, watch it, find it
Bubble Check is a spray-on leak detector you apply right where you suspect the leak: the valve, the bead, the stem, a spot in the tread. Where air escapes, it foams into tight, visible bubbles you can point at. No tank, no dunk, no guessing about which part of the wheel was actually underwater. You can do it with the wheel still on the car, which means you can show the customer the leak instead of describing it.
If air is getting out, Bubble Check shows you exactly where. You stop hunting and start fixing.
A faster way to work a leak complaint
Here is the workflow that saves the most time. Air the tire to spec. Spray the valve, the stem base, and around the bead on both sides. Watch for foam, which builds within seconds at a real leak. Mark the spot, fix it, then spray again to confirm the repair before the wheel goes back on. That last step is the one most shops skip, and it is the one that stops the comeback. Confirming the seal at the bay is far cheaper than having the car back on the rack next week.
Why not just soapy water
Plenty of shops keep a spray bottle of dish soap for this. It works until it does not. Soapy water runs off vertical surfaces before it can build a bubble, lathers into a mess that hides the exact leak point, and leaves residue you have to chase. A purpose-built detector clings where you spray it and foams into tight bubbles right at the leak, so you see the source, not a sink full of suds. The whole value is pinpoint, and a pinpoint is what a homemade mix gives up.
Fewer comebacks, faster bays
Every minute a tech spends wrestling a wheel into a tank is a minute not turning billable work, and every slow leak that slips back out the door is a customer who trusts you a little less. A spray that pinpoints the leak the first time protects both. The largest independent tire retailer in the country already uses it for exactly that reason.
Common questions
How do you find a slow tire leak without a dunk tank?
Spray a leak detector like Bubble Check on the valve, bead, stem, and any suspect spot. Escaping air turns it into visible bubbles, so you pinpoint the leak without submerging the wheel.
Will it find a TPMS or valve leak?
Yes. Those are the leaks a tank hides most often, and they are exactly where a targeted spray shows a weep fastest.
Can I use it with the tire still on the car?
Yes. You can spray and read it at the vehicle, which is also the easiest way to show the customer the leak before you quote the repair.
Can I use it to check a repair?
That is one of its best uses. Confirm the bead or valve is sealed before the wheel goes back on, and you stop the comeback before it starts.
How is it different from soapy water in a bottle?
It clings to vertical surfaces and foams into tight bubbles right at the leak instead of a messy lather all over the wheel, so the leak is easy to see and easy to wipe off after.
See how fast it finds one in your own bay. Request a free sample and run it on the next slow leak that comes in.