This technique works well with minute punctures. The bare essentials to perform this operation are a small sachet of super-glue(per leak), like Feviquick, and a disposable syringe (its a good idea to by a second in case the glue.
First pump up the Basketball until it is relatively firm. Now immerse the ball in a half-filled bucket of water (half-filled so the water doesn't come splashing down all over you), making sure that all of the ball is completely below the surface. Locate all the leaks by the stream of bubbles emerging from the surface of the ball. Encircle and cross the leak(like a cross-hair)( using a permanent marker (contrasting colour) or a ball point pen, if you don't mind the tiny marks on your ball, as this will help locate the leak quickly.
Now you may release the part of the air from the ball (using the nozzle provided with your basketball) to make sure that air is no longer emerging from the puncture.
This is the tricky part. The next few steps must be executed quickly so its best you read this part through before attempting the following....
BE VERY CAREFUL HANDLING THE SYRINGE. DO NOT ACCIDENTALLY INJECT YOURSELF OR ANYONE ELSE WITH THE SUPER GLUE AS THE CONSEQUENCES COULD BE LETHAL. IF YOU CHOOSE TO PERFORM THIS OPERATION MAKE SURE YOU DO IT IN THE PRESENCE OF ANOTHER ADULT, AS A PRECAUTIONARY MEASURE, WHO IS IN A POSITION TO FETCH HELP IN CASE OF ANY EMERGENCY.
Open your sachet/bottle of super glue and dip the needle of the syringe into the glue itself. Draw the glue into the syringe and make sure there aren't any air bubbles.
Now locate the leak, which you have marked with the marker pen and insert the needle through the skin. Let the syringe be inserted up to half its entire length. Now turn the ball until your syringe is dangling underneath the ball itself. At this point, inject a tiny amount of super glue into the ball while keeping the ball above the syringe itself. Carefully removed the syringe from the ball and apply a couple of drops of super glue to the punctured area on the outer surface. Do not apply too much here as the glue will tend to spread and solidify unevenly ruining the appearance of the ball.
Keep the ball in the same position (with the puncture directly at the bottom) for a period of time until the super glue dries completely.
Repeat the process for each of the leaks, one at a time. Use multiple syringes (a syringe can rarely be reused after it has drawn super glue as the glue solidifies inside) to repair multiple punctures.
After this step, you may now pump up the ball and repeat the immersion test to see if all the leaks have been properly sealed. If yes, then you are ready to play ball. If not, then its most likely you injected the super-glue in the wrong spot or were too careless with the ball's position while injecting the glue.
In theory, the super-glue instantly binds with the material inside the ball forming an airtight crust. The excess glue pools around the puncture, while a certain amount trickles into the air passage of the leak itself. This created a sort of board-pin like structure that proves to be quite sturdy and is also complimented by the increased air-pressure once the ball is properly pumped. The glue on the outer surface reinforces the punctured region preventing the passage from reopening in the near future.
If the ball is a real leather ball with a rubber insert which inflates - Undo the ties on the outer surface. This will allow you to gain access to the inner rubber tube. Using a standard bicycle repair kit, allowing the rubber patch to dry fully reinsert the inner tube and inflate. The pressure of the air will push the patch against the leather wall helping to secure it. If the ball is a has the valve on the outer face of the ball and the ball is made of man-made substances the ball is basically only temporarily repairable as a patch of leak covering will be hit off at some point due to the rough handling rendering the ball useless.
Fix-a-Flat kits work on a very temporary basis. A punctured tire should be replaced.
Buy a tire pluging kit read the instructions and follow them
Go to www.bicycletutor.com, there's bound to be a video link there showing what to do.
the answer is 3
You can use a bicycle puncture repair kit. I've repaired literally hundreds of punctured wellies that way.
The homonym for "punctured pumpkin" is "punctured puncheon," which refers to a large cask or barrel.
You can do a DIY fix on a punctured oil drum using metal mesh, pliable tiles, and a metal grade heat resistant epoxy in order to keep the oil from leaking with the aid of a mechanic.
You need to see a doctor and they will send you to a specialist. Don't fool around with this as you could make it worse.
Autozone and Advance auto both have gas tank repair kits that can be used to patch the tank.
Yes, punctured veins leak blood.
Whatever punctured the navel goes into the intestines.
A tubeless tire can get punctured but air will leak slowly.