IMO, the tire pressure on the RV-12 is a critical pre-flight item. Visual check is not good enough, I make it a point to put a gauge on the tubes before every flight day if at all possible. If I take the airplane somewhere overnight or longer I take a small battery powered portable inflator with me, of course this gets more complicated if you have wheel fairings installed so that scenario is sometimes the exception.
Almost all tubes have at least a very very slow leak and we run a lower pressure by design. The margin between the correct pressure, and a pressure that will allow the tube to slip is narrow. You are lucky if you did not damage the tube when it spun on the wheel, or you may find that a slow leak is now losing air a little bit faster. These tubes are expensive and showing up to a problem can ruin your plans to fly for a day, making sure you are at pressure will prevent that as well as increase awareness of any issues.