IronWing
No Lifer
- Jul 20, 2001
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- 33,851
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Check the pressure in your spare every decade or so. Nothing like the sinking feeling one gets when changing a flat for a flat.
Now THAT'S just fucking hilarious!
My 05 Expedition warns me when the tire pressure is off. In the winter, the sensors register a slightly lower pressure. Must be time to take the truck into the shop and have all the air changed...I'm sure that fresh air will make all the difference in the world.:hmm:
Most tire pressure monitoring systems only notify the driver when the tires are 25% underinflated which is far too low! The tire pressure should be much higher than that and these systems are just a fail safe.
I would ask Boy George for advice regarding sexing up the ladies, and carry it out, before I would listen to ANYTHING Fleabag has to say about tires.
Make sure they replace the air filter on all 4 tires too...and that they lube up the gasket before attaching the new filters.
Might as well check the blinker fluid while they have the wheels off.
Of course I know more than them,
PSA: Fleabag is not qualified to give out auto related advice
PS: I was wrong. I should have said Fleabag is not qualified to give out advice.
Of course I know more than them, why else haven't they produced a car that gets decent mileage? The answer to those engineers are the engineers from Honda and Toyota.
Of course I know more than them, why else haven't they produced a car that gets decent mileage? The answer to those engineers are the engineers from Honda and Toyota.
The ones in my wife's Lexus go off with only a drop of 2-3psi. Of course, I always keep her tires inflated per the manufacturer's recommendation.
I do not intend this thread to become another discussion about the merits, safety and benefits of inflating tires to sidewall rating or not.
With that out of the way, I just wanted to say that if the area in which you live has seen a 20 degree drop in temperatures, that unless you've inflated your tires within the time frame of the temperature drop, that it's time to inflate your tires. Furthermore, I'd like to stress checking your tire pressure before driving on them is critically important. Check your tire pressure once before driving off (early morning before work) and right before you go to inflate your tires that day; then while inflating, subtract the difference in tire pressure. Whether you inflate your tires to sidewall rating, above, to what the manufacturer recommends or anywhere in between, it doesn't matter, just inflate them!
All tire pressure guidelines are ALWAYS when the tires are COLD, soon as you drive on those tires, even for a 1/4 mile, those tires are no longer cold and the PSI of the tire can rise by several points!!!
fleabag! since you're in love with tires and the gases in them
maybe you should change your username to "Gasbag".
I like how you think it's "only" 2-3 psi. Not to mention the fact that you're probably inflating the tires based upon the PSI when the car's tires have already warmed up and not when they're cold.
Tires are the very most important part of the car, not even the brakes matter as much as the tires do! If you inflate your tires with Nitrogen, they'll last longer as there won't be as much oxygen to react with the tires from the inside and will deflate slower, have more steady pressures. As for the avatar, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a tire inflated to the manufacturer suggestion and to sidewall because it still wouldn't be over-inflated AND so happens to be a radial.
Nice assumption there. He never mentioned a single thing that would let you jump to that conclusion.
Tires are the very most important part of the car, not even the brakes matter as much as the tires do! If you inflate your tires with Nitrogen, they'll last longer as there won't be as much oxygen to react with the tires from the inside and will deflate slower, have more steady pressures. As for the avatar, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a tire inflated to the manufacturer suggestion and to sidewall because it still wouldn't be over-inflated AND so happens to be a radial.
Tires are the very most important part of the car, not even the brakes matter as much as the tires do! If you inflate your tires with Nitrogen, they'll last longer as there won't be as much oxygen to react with the tires from the inside and will deflate slower, have more steady pressures. As for the avatar, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a tire inflated to the manufacturer suggestion and to sidewall because it still wouldn't be over-inflated AND so happens to be a radial.
Unless you let your car sit for very long periods of time you'll have to replace the tires because of tire wear long before oxidation becomes the limiting factor.
So damn wrong.
Sure he did, the fact that the tire pressure monitoring system comes on after "only" 2-3psi would indicate to me that he doesn't inflate the tires enough in the first place! The reason for that is because those systems are ONLY suppose to come on when the tire is 25% under-inflated, and 25% of 30psi is around 7.5psi! His tires are probably 30psi when they're warm, maybe 29 and probably 23-25psi when they're COLD, therefore 2-3psi would likely be enough to set off that warning.
I'd LOVE to prove you wrong! Again, we're not talking about bias-ply or bias tires, but radials! So, what would you like me to do, take pictures of a tire on a car at various tire pressures and let you play a game of what tire pressure the tire is at? This page proves that it's usually quite difficult to ascertain what a car's tire pressure is:http://www.tirerack.com/tires/tiretech/techpage.jsp?techid=1&