Nov-13-2018 02:26 PM
Nov-15-2018 05:36 AM
wa8yxm wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
I preferred the Crossfire tire gauges for my duals. You purchase these for the specific PSI that you want and then they tie both of your duals together and balance out the pressure in both. Then all it takes is a glance at the gauge to see if the pressure is OK. If one tire does get a puncture, it will not allow both to deflate. It also means you only have one valve to inflate both tires at the same time with the exact same tire pressure.
I have a set of 100 PSI crossfires. I am unable to install them (well I might be able to now that I have dually valves but alas they don't work well with those either)
Last year during my southern migration I blew a tire (inner dual Driver's side as I recall) and because the outer tire was fully inflated made it to destination before I figured it out...
Put on a new one. and then this fall put on 6 New ones (22xx.xx dollars worth of Toyos)
With the cross fire I'd not have made it as the other tire being under inflated would have blown. and instead onf one new casing I'd have needed 2. and blocked traffic as well. with possible 2ndary damage to rims and RV.
Nov-15-2018 05:10 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
I preferred the Crossfire tire gauges for my duals. You purchase these for the specific PSI that you want and then they tie both of your duals together and balance out the pressure in both. Then all it takes is a glance at the gauge to see if the pressure is OK. If one tire does get a puncture, it will not allow both to deflate. It also means you only have one valve to inflate both tires at the same time with the exact same tire pressure.
Nov-15-2018 04:39 AM
Nov-14-2018 05:03 PM
Chum lee wrote:
If you force yourself to use the old fashioned direct read pressure gauge you will need to actually bend over and LOOK at the tire while you check the pressure. Getting in the habit of doing that will present a lot of additional critical information regarding the condition of your tires and wheels. Things like tread and side wall damage, tread separation, nails, tread wear, alignment, manufacturing date, sidewall bulges, loose/missing lug nuts/wheel covers, and a few other things I can't think of right now.
Or, during your next blowout you could ask yourself, hummmmm, why did that happen because I'm sure the pressure was fine?
Chum lee
Nov-14-2018 05:00 PM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
I preferred the Crossfire tire gauges for my duals. You purchase these for the specific PSI that you want and then they tie both of your duals together and balance out the pressure in both. Then all it takes is a glance at the gauge to see if the pressure is OK. If one tire does get a puncture, it will not allow both to deflate. It also means you only have one valve to inflate both tires at the same time with the exact same tire pressure.
Nov-14-2018 12:39 PM
Nov-14-2018 11:54 AM
Nov-14-2018 11:06 AM
Nov-14-2018 06:35 AM
Jayco23FB wrote:
Not sure if those are the same brand, but we had them on our fire trucks with many failures. We tried a couple different brands with similar results. We ended up removing them. I had a set on my travel trailer, altough I did not have a failure I took them off anyway to avoid one.
Nov-14-2018 06:21 AM
Nov-14-2018 05:06 AM
Nov-13-2018 03:34 PM
Nov-13-2018 03:04 PM
Nov-13-2018 02:59 PM