Forum Discussion
- RoyBExplorer IIA rotating hub air seal sounds interesting but it could also be a easy failure point loosing all of your 80lb plus air pressure...
As long as it has been being used now must have a pretty good reliability rate.
Roy Ken - rgatijnet1Explorer IIIThey are working on a version for cars and light duty trucks so it may be on the market at some point in the future. It may also end up going the way of the TPMS which are standard on all new cars. If the government gets involved it may be mandated on all vehicles as a safety measure and as an economy factor for better fuel mileage with properly inflated tires.
- MountainAir05Explorer IIIts not something new, Seen it on big rig trailers, the government had it on some of the heavy duty missile trailers,and GM had it on some Hum Vs. Neighbor showed it to me on his hummer. Different design not a pump. Air went to the axle /hub and pin holes, in the hub let air into the wheel assy. This seems to be a lot better system.
- rgatijnet1Explorer IIII remember the Humvee system that they use to inflate or deflate the tires based on the terrain. It does use an on board compressor and is a little more complicated.
- wa8yxmExplorer III
RoyB wrote:
A rotating hub air seal sounds interesting but it could also be a easy failure point loosing all of your 80lb plus air pressure...
As long as it has been being used now must have a pretty good reliability rate.
Roy Ken
There is already rotating seal systems in sue bu this "Halo" system does not use that. Interesting, it is.. not sure how well it will work but on paper it looks very interesting.. - crassterExplorer IISounds good if they are well tested and big rig type. If some RV place makes a cheapie, I'd pass.
- Kayteg1Explorer IIWhen on Mexican vacations 12 years ago, I noticed all interstate buses had those, or similar.
- bob_nestorExplorer III
rgatijnet1 wrote:
I remember the Humvee system that they use to inflate or deflate the tires based on the terrain. It does use an on board compressor and is a little more complicated.
This is really old technology. The WWII floating 6x6 vehicles (DUCs) had this feature. They could deflate or inflate the tires from the drivers seat to accommodate the terrain, especially when coming out of the water onto a beach. - Kayteg1Explorer III wonder what maintenance those things require?
Rotating seal working with 60-100 psi of dry air doesn't sound like lasting device. - Dutch_12078Explorer IIThe Aperia Technologies Halo Tire Inflator simply bolts to the wheel hubs of the drivers. They are not available for steer tires. Each unit is self contained and used a pendulum like mechanism to pump air into the standard valve stems. Aperia sells them for $299 each, and says they have sold thousands since introducing them in 2014. According to Aperia, the units have an expected maintenance-free life of over 500,000 miles or about 10 years.
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