Nov-29-2019 03:37 AM
Nov-30-2019 12:57 AM
2bzy2c wrote:Captain_Happy wrote:
Something else to consider is inflating your tire with Nitrogen instead of pain air. Nitrogen doesn't heat up like plain air does. You stated that you F53 handles pretty good with PSI at 80 PSI when you start out, but as your tires heat up the handling changes. I've owned 2 F53 and they both handled badly.
Bzzzzzt WRONG!
There is virtually no difference between N2, O2, Air and Co2 thermal expansion rates.
"I'll take Thermal Expansion for $100 Alex."
Geek speak on the subject -->
Ideal Gas Law: PV = nRT
This formula is the "Ideal Gas Law Formula." Although there is no such thing as an ideal gas the formula is pretty accurate for N2, CO2, and oxygen as we assume that the gas molecules are point masses and the collisions of the molecules are totally elastic. (A completely elastic collision means that the energy of the molecules before a collision equals the energy of the molecules after a collision, or, to put it another way, there is no attraction among the molecules.) The formula becomes less accurate as the gas becomes very compressed and as the temperature decreases but here "very compressed" pressures are well above even the highest tire pressures and "decreased temperatures" are extremely cold, too cold for tires. There are some correction factors for both of these factors for each gas to convert it to a Real Gas Law Formula, but the Ideal Gas Law is a good estimation of the way N2, CO2 and "air" should react through temperature changes. What does all this mean? It simply means that "air", nitrogen vapor, and CO2 vapor should all react pretty much the same within normal tire pressures (0-120 PSI) and temperatures.
Nov-29-2019 10:38 PM
Nov-29-2019 05:22 PM
Captain_Happy wrote:
Something else to consider is inflating your tire with Nitrogen instead of pain air. Nitrogen doesn't heat up like plain air does. You stated that you F53 handles pretty good with PSI at 80 PSI when you start out, but as your tires heat up the handling changes. I've owned 2 F53 and they both handled badly.
Nov-29-2019 05:00 PM
Nov-29-2019 03:06 PM
Nov-29-2019 10:50 AM
Nov-29-2019 09:18 AM
Octaneforce wrote:I might have meant sway bars rather than stabilizers. Please forgive me! That aside, thanks for identifying efforts you made to control steering. I may be able to use some of them. Again, thanks.
What do you mean by front and rear stabilizers? Sway bars? The best thing i ever did for steering wander was a supersteer rear trac bar and 4 bilstien shocks. I also did 4 centramatic balancing rings which is supposed to lower tire temps. And to ice the cake, i measured my front swaybar diameter (mine is 1 1/4) and ordered universal poly swaybar bushings from energy suspension to replace the mushy rubber ones. It made head winds almost non exististent. I have a p30.
Nov-29-2019 08:09 AM
Nov-29-2019 06:03 AM
Nov-29-2019 05:10 AM
goufgators wrote:way2roll wrote:I share your concern about under inflated tires but, knowing that they would be 'under inflated' for possible no more than 10 or 15 miles...I was just wondering if that would be enough time to damage the tires. I believe you're saying yes it would be inadvisable. Thanks for your comments.
Cold PSI means just that. Lowering PSI so the tires heat up to the recommended cold psi defeats the purpose of setting cold psi in the first place. They will be under inflated. As I am sure you are aware, low psi is the primary reason for tire failure - aside from a puncture. The F53 is notorious for poor handling. It's not going to handle like a car or a DP - ever. We had 2 gassers over the past decade and both were rather exhausting at the end of a long day in the saddle. Constant corrections. I would consider different tires, cheap handling fix or another model RV. Lowering psi below the tire manufacturers recommendation is not the proper way to handle the issue. You'd be borrowing risk. That of course is my opinion and I usually err to the side of caution. I am sure there are thousands of people out there driving on under inflated tires by 5 psi and either don't know it or don't care. I am confident however your tires will generate more heat.
Nov-29-2019 04:41 AM
Tyler0215 wrote:I was hoping for a comment like your's. Let's see if anyone else agrees.
Try it and see how the MH handles, 5 psi less is not going to kill your tires.
Nov-29-2019 04:38 AM
way2roll wrote:I share your concern about under inflated tires but, knowing that they would be 'under inflated' for possible no more than 10 or 15 miles...I was just wondering if that would be enough time to damage the tires. I believe you're saying yes it would be inadvisable. Thanks for your comments.
Cold PSI means just that. Lowering PSI so the tires heat up to the recommended cold psi defeats the purpose of setting cold psi in the first place. They will be under inflated. As I am sure you are aware, low psi is the primary reason for tire failure - aside from a puncture. The F53 is notorious for poor handling. It's not going to handle like a car or a DP - ever. We had 2 gassers over the past decade and both were rather exhausting at the end of a long day in the saddle. Constant corrections. I would consider different tires, cheap handling fix or another model RV. Lowering psi below the tire manufacturers recommendation is not the proper way to handle the issue. You'd be borrowing risk. That of course is my opinion and I usually err to the side of caution. I am sure there are thousands of people out there driving on under inflated tires by 5 psi and either don't know it or don't care. I am confident however your tires will generate more heat.
Nov-29-2019 04:38 AM
Nov-29-2019 04:38 AM
Nov-29-2019 04:20 AM