Jan-20-2015 01:56 AM
Jan-21-2015 02:40 AM
Jan-20-2015 03:30 PM
Jan-20-2015 02:58 PM
Jan-20-2015 07:20 AM
TNRIVERSIDE wrote:yankee camper wrote:
Don't want to hi-jack this thread but as a newbie I've got to ask. If you're supposed to check your tire pressure cold and find you need air how do you do that if you've got to drive 5 miles to a gas station air pump? Is 5-6 miles short enough where you're not heating up your tires ? Hope this is worded so that it makes sense to you guys.
Here what I would do.
If my tire is 10psi low before I drive. It will still be 10 psi low after I drive the 5 miles to the gas station. Regardless what the tire guage is reading at the gas station I would add air until I have increased it by 10psi.
Jan-20-2015 06:50 AM
yankee camper wrote:
Don't want to hi-jack this thread but as a newbie I've got to ask. If you're supposed to check your tire pressure cold and find you need air how do you do that if you've got to drive 5 miles to a gas station air pump? Is 5-6 miles short enough where you're not heating up your tires ? Hope this is worded so that it makes sense to you guys.
Jan-20-2015 06:45 AM
becker wrote:
This question has probably been asked before but upon searching I couldn't find anything.
When traveling from a northern state where the temperature is well below freezing to an southern state where the temperature is 70 degrees, how do you handle your tire pressure settings?...... and if the situation is reversed. When in a warm area and your tire pressure is set correctly (in the morning before getting on the road) and the next morning (in the cold area) your tires are showing 10 degrees or so low, do you take your tire pressures back to the correct settings before getting back on the road? Tire size is 295/80R/22.5 Michelins with about 2000 miles on them.
Where can I find some information of this subject?
Thanks.
Jan-20-2015 06:14 AM
Effy wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:CapriRacer wrote:
The alternative is to constantly adjust the pressures as the ambient temperature changes. That's a lot of work and requires a lot of math.
If you check your pressure each day before you drive on your tires there is no math involved. Your tire gauge will read the correct pressure and automatically adjust for the ambient temperature. 100psi at 30 degrees with your gauge is correct at that location as is 100 psi with your gauge at 90 degrees in a warmer location.
All of the manufacturers warn you about adjusting the tire pressure on warm tires.
By this logic, if I drive from MD to FL in one day, I leave at 30 Deg and arrive at 90, my tires would be very over inflated. I adjust before the return trip and now I am way under inflated by the time I get home - except I am not. This is why tires can withstand a very wide range of tolerances in both psi and temp. Because constantly adjusting them is unrealistic and frankly uncalled for. Check cold and adjust before you leave for a trip then let the tires do what they do. Owning a TPMS for about a year, warm to cold climate or vice versa, I haven't seen any dramatic swing one way or another. Once they heat up they stabilize.
Jan-20-2015 05:06 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:CapriRacer wrote:
The alternative is to constantly adjust the pressures as the ambient temperature changes. That's a lot of work and requires a lot of math.
If you check your pressure each day before you drive on your tires there is no math involved. Your tire gauge will read the correct pressure and automatically adjust for the ambient temperature. 100psi at 30 degrees with your gauge is correct at that location as is 100 psi with your gauge at 90 degrees in a warmer location.
All of the manufacturers warn you about adjusting the tire pressure on warm tires.
Jan-20-2015 04:54 AM
yankee camper wrote:
Don't want to hi-jack this thread but as a newbie I've got to ask. If you're supposed to check your tire pressure cold and find you need air how do you do that if you've got to drive 5 miles to a gas station air pump? Is 5-6 miles short enough where you're not heating up your tires ? Hope this is worded so that it makes sense to you guys.
Jan-20-2015 04:16 AM
Jan-20-2015 02:57 AM
CapriRacer wrote:
The alternative is to constantly adjust the pressures as the ambient temperature changes. That's a lot of work and requires a lot of math.
Jan-20-2015 02:48 AM
becker wrote:
This question has probably been asked before but upon searching I couldn't find anything.
When traveling from a northern state where the temperature is well below freezing to an southern state where the temperature is 70 degrees, how do you handle your tire pressure settings?...... and if the situation is reversed. When in a warm area and your tire pressure is set correctly (in the morning before getting on the road) and the next morning (in the cold area) your tires are showing 10 degrees or so low, do you take your tire pressures back to the correct settings before getting back on the road? Tire size is 295/80R/22.5 Michelins with about 2000 miles on them.
Where can I find some information of this subject?
Thanks.
Jan-20-2015 02:27 AM