โJan-13-2018 09:22 AM
โJan-15-2018 07:34 AM
Dtank wrote:GordonThree wrote:
There's no sensor inside the wheel. Computer uses voodoo....... My guess
Same voodoo a Thermos uses.
Keeps hot things hot, cold things cold. - How do it know ??
Voodoo, of course !!...:S
.
โJan-15-2018 06:36 AM
โJan-14-2018 11:03 PM
GordonThree wrote:
There's no sensor inside the wheel. Computer uses voodoo....... My guess
โJan-14-2018 08:09 PM
โJan-14-2018 08:21 AM
โJan-14-2018 08:12 AM
โJan-14-2018 07:35 AM
โJan-14-2018 07:18 AM
โJan-14-2018 06:51 AM
Harvey51 wrote:
Hmm, why not a sensor mounted in the rim, powered by electromagnetic induction as new phones can be charged?
โJan-14-2018 06:49 AM
GordonThree wrote:
There's no sensor inside the wheel. Computer uses voodoo or maybe math, ambient temperature and wheel speed to calculate air pressure. My guess
โJan-14-2018 05:42 AM
Boon Docker wrote:Maybe I'm misunderstanding how these work, but it looks like the passive sensor "replies" to a "query" from an antenna. Without input from the antenna, there would be no action by the sensor. You may not need a battery in the sensor but there would have to be an antenna constantly querying the sensor. Or am I "unclear on the concept". ๐ktmrfs wrote:
virtually ALL TPMS systems rely on tire rotation to wake up the system to conserve battery life. the ones inside the tire have a battery. I seriously doubt there are any that do not use a battery.
Even the external systems sense roation to wake up the system.
centrifical rotation by itself is not a way to generate power.
Yes there are batteryless TPMS sensors on the market that use "SAW" technology.
โJan-14-2018 04:32 AM
ktmrfs wrote:
virtually ALL TPMS systems rely on tire rotation to wake up the system to conserve battery life. the ones inside the tire have a battery. I seriously doubt there are any that do not use a battery.
Even the external systems sense roation to wake up the system.
centrifical rotation by itself is not a way to generate power.
โJan-13-2018 08:46 PM
โJan-13-2018 08:27 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
virtually ALL TPMS systems rely on tire rotation to wake up the system to conserve battery life. the ones inside the tire have a battery. I seriously doubt there are any that do not use a battery.
Even the external systems sense roation to wake up the system.
centrifical rotation by itself is not a way to generate power.