โMay-27-2016 07:15 AM
โJun-01-2016 07:50 PM
Me Again wrote:atwowheelguy wrote:
That should become the poster child for ST tire problems. Chris
โJun-01-2016 07:47 PM
atwowheelguy wrote:
The Combined Gas Law states:
P1xV1/T1 = P2xV2/T2
P absolute pressure in atmospheres {(gauge pressure + 14.7)/14.7}
V volume
T temperature in degrees Kelvin
With an increase in pressure, the tire will stretch a little and the volume will increase. For this exercise, we will assume that the volume remains constant.
70 psig = 84.7 psia = 5.762 atm
84 psig = 98.7 psia = 6.714 atm
Assume T1 = 70F = 294.3K
Calculate the temperature, T2, required to raise the pressure from 70 psig to 84 psig.
T2 = T1 x P2/P1 = 294.3 x 6.714/5.762 = 342.9K = 158 F.
So it would take an 88F temperature rise to increase the pressure from 70 psig to 84 psig.
Now assume a 30F temperature rise from 70F to 100F.
Calculate the pressure rise.
Assume T2 = 100F = 310.9K
P2 = P1 x T2/T1 = 5.762 atm x 310.9/294.3 = 6.087 atm = 89.5 psia = 74.8 psig
So a temperature rise from 70F to 100F would increase the pressure from 70 psig to 75 psig.
โMay-31-2016 05:00 AM
atwowheelguy wrote:
โMay-31-2016 04:33 AM
โMay-30-2016 07:51 PM
โMay-30-2016 07:33 PM
โMay-30-2016 07:23 PM
โMay-30-2016 05:54 PM
1ofmany wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:This is also my understanding...however, the notion of what "cold pressure" is has been a source of interest. If you live in an area where the temperature varies wildly from day to day (like 30 degrees, or more), check your tire air pressure the day before the temperature is expected to drop those 30, or more, degrees, and then check again the next day after the temperature has dropped. I have seen a 10 psi drop under those circumstances...so, what is the correct "cold temp" reading?
Tires rarely blow out due to over pressure. All vehicle tires are designed to operate well above the maximum cold pressure shown on the sidewall. The far more common tire failure cause is under inflation.
โMay-28-2016 08:34 AM
โMay-28-2016 08:23 AM
Dutch_12078 wrote:
Tires rarely blow out due to over pressure. All vehicle tires are designed to operate well above the maximum cold pressure shown on the sidewall. The far more common tire failure cause is under inflation.
โMay-28-2016 05:18 AM
1ofmany wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:This is also my understanding...however, the notion of what "cold pressure" is has been a source of interest. If you live in an area where the temperature varies wildly from day to day (like 30 degrees, or more), check your tire air pressure the day before the temperature is expected to drop those 30, or more, degrees, and then check again the next day after the temperature has dropped. I have seen a 10 psi drop under those circumstances...so, what is the correct "cold temp" reading?
Tires rarely blow out due to over pressure. All vehicle tires are designed to operate well above the maximum cold pressure shown on the sidewall. The far more common tire failure cause is under inflation.
โMay-28-2016 03:43 AM
Dutch_12078 wrote:This is also my understanding...however, the notion of what "cold pressure" is has been a source of interest. If you live in an area where the temperature varies wildly from day to day (like 30 degrees, or more), check your tire air pressure the day before the temperature is expected to drop those 30, or more, degrees, and then check again the next day after the temperature has dropped. I have seen a 10 psi drop under those circumstances...so, what is the correct "cold temp" reading?
Tires rarely blow out due to over pressure. All vehicle tires are designed to operate well above the maximum cold pressure shown on the sidewall. The far more common tire failure cause is under inflation.
โMay-27-2016 10:51 AM
the bear II wrote:
Don't trust the DIC
I use several fleet vehicles, different makes and models, anytime I manually check pressure or gas mileage the DIC is off to the point where I wouldn't trust the information. And yes my tire pressure gauge is very accurate.
This also goes for the speedometers... some are off by > or < 5MPH.
โMay-27-2016 08:05 AM