Wild Road Service Tales: Techs Learn to Expect the Unexpected
Frozen lug nuts, bad weather and heavy traffic ā these are some of the more mundane surprises that road service technicians can encounter.
But once in a while, you come across a situation thatās so odd you remember it many years later, says Clinton Smith, service truck tech for Exit 11 Truck Tire Service, which is based in Richfield, Ohio.Ā
āWhen I was 20 years old, we got a call from a hauler who was delivering rental cars,ā he recalls.
Ā After unloading, the truckās driver āran over a strip of spikesā while exiting the lot ā resulting in 18 flat tires.Ā
Smith tracked down replacement tires, recruited his brother to help and drove to the truckās location.Ā
āI asked the driver, āSo what happened?ā and he said, āI donāt know. I heard a bunch of air leaking and thought I had blown an airbag or something.ā He didnāt know what heād done.āĀ
It took five hours to get the truck up and running.
āThat was a big bill!āĀ
Another time, Smith was routed to a truck that had āa rock that was stuck between two duals.ā At least thatās what the dispatcher told him.Ā
āI was thinking maybe it was a softball-sized rock stuck between some tires. Weāve seen that before.āĀ
The rock turned out to be a 150-pound āboulderā that was lodged between the front and rear axles of the rigās trailer.Ā
āI had to remove all the tires to get the boulder out,ā says Smith. āAnd then I put the tires back on. I was not expecting to see that. The driver had run over a snowbank and the boulder was hidden inside of it. Thatās how it got wedged up underneath there.āĀ
Some road service jobs have included brushes with fame.Ā
āIāve done a couple of calls for the big motorhomes and buses that rock stars drive around in,ā including one that belonged to classic rocker Steve Miller.
āHe wasnāt on the bus,ā says Smith. āBut I met Phil Vassar, the country singer, while replacing tires on his bus.āĀ
K.C. Rennicker works out of Ziegler Tire & Supply Co.ās facility in Dover, Ohio. (Ziegler Tire is based in nearby Massillon, Ohio.)Ā
He has been a road service tech for 15 years.Ā
āThere have been a fewā memorable calls, he says. āI guess the one I remember the most is when they sent me to a campgroundā to replace a tire on an RV.Ā
āI called the guy who owned the RV to let him know I was on my way. And he said, āJust to let you know, this is a clothing-optional campground.āāĀ
Rennicker jokes that he was the best-dressed person there!Ā
Severe weather can present its own challenges. āA few years ago, I was out in 20-below zero temperatures. Thatās pretty brutal.āĀ
Other memorable calls have involved man-made dangers, ālike drivers who donāt move overā to provide proper clearance.Ā
āOne night I had a semi go past me so closely, it shook my soul. I didnāt see it, but I felt it. It was entirely too close.āĀ
This happened despite the fact the Rennicker had set up reflective triangles and other safety devices.Ā
āWe preach safety to our service technicians as much as we can,ā says John Ziegler III, regional sales and operations manager for Ziegler Tire.Ā
āWe know itās not the easiest job in the world. Itās tough work. We give them the most training to make sure they go home safely every night.āĀ
Smith agrees that safety is the top priority.
When it comes to calls, āif you donāt feel comfortable, donāt do it," he says.
"Whether you have to make a driver limp to an exit or call the highway patrol and ask for a cruiser to sit behind you and close off a lane while you work, donāt put yourself in harmās way just to get the job done faster.āĀ
About the Author
Mike Manges
Editor
Mike Manges is Modern Tire Dealer’s editor. A 28-year tire industry veteran, he is a three-time International Automotive Media Association Award winner, holds a Gold Award from the Association of Automotive Publication Editors and was named a finalist for the prestigious Jesse H. Neal Award, the Pulitzer Prize of business-to-business media, in 2024. He also was named Endeavor Business Media's Editor of the Year in 2024. Mike has traveled the world in pursuit of stories that will help independent tire dealers move their businesses forward. Before rejoining MTD in 2019, he held corporate communications positions at two Fortune 500 companies and served as MTD’s senior editor from 2000 to 2010.

