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I was reading the tire pressure thread and instead of hijacking it I decided to make this one.
I have heard from a lot of people that filling your tires with nitrogen lowers the pressure change when the tire heats up, but I also heard that it doesn't do anything. As far as I know th gas in the tire has no effect on the pressure change. So if pressure change isn't the reason that nitogen is better than why do people use it?
92 Black 968 manual coupe
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Before you get the plethora of responses you get to hear from someone that spent 4 years in the Air Force working on airplanes...
The Air Force (can't speak for the airlines) uses pure nitrogen in all their aircraft tires. Reason is the tires go from bone cold to super hot in a matter of seconds. One of the big properties the experts told me it has over air is it's DRY!!! And the nitrogen doesn't expand as much when it gets hot.
There, done...now get ready for a million different answers... <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
Michael Sorbera
aka San Antonio Silver Bullet
2002 VW Beetle TDI
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Not sure a million answers are necessary. Silverbullet hit the nail on the head. Skip the physics lessons (I always did) - simply put, nitrogen does not react to heat/cold cycles the way O2 does. As a result your tire pressures stay fairly constant instead of fluctuating. This is particularly key during fall and spring when outside temps can vary tremendously day to day. I have on occasion found my O2 filled tires as much as 5-7 pounds low after just a few days when temps are up and down.
Of course the solution to this with O2 is a good pressure gauge and the memory to remember to check. Nitrogen just gets you off the hook for this task. My tire guy fills with nitrogen so now I'm set for the Porsche, still checking the other cars when I remember. I probably would not spend the $40-60 that tire shops/dealerships want for a 'nitrogen plan' where they do an initial replacment fill and then refill as necessary for a period of 1 or two years.
Always check tire pressure when tires are cold.
Ralph
2002 Carrera Coupe - Orient Red Metallic
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So I see that blowing up the tires by mouth has the advantage of reduce the O2 content. Haven't yet figured out the effect of the extra moisture.
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1993 Black coupe @ 100K
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so it is basically just to get dry air in the tires and the actual gas doesn't make much of a difference since air is mostly nitrogen anyways?
92 Black 968 manual coupe
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Okay, I just didn't think that the moisture would make a noticable difference.
92 Black 968 manual coupe
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Some say Physics?
First I thought PV = nRT and the type of gas doesn't matter.
The type of gas must matter because the atomic weight will affect how fast T changes and the heat transfer rates from rubber to gas. That implies we should look at specific heat capacity.
Specific heat = 29.1 for Nitrogen, 29.4 for oxygen, 28.8 for hydrogen and 4.2 for water. Hey water is bad. Best result is pure oxygen at 29.4. OK if you don't mind your tires igniting at some point. Well, no they won't ignite but their life span will suffer due to oxidation.
All right, I see why water is not good to put in tires. I'll use care to fill the tires on days with low humidity. No more doing it by mouth!!
This derivation is based on high school chemistry class I attend in previous century.
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1993 Black coupe @ 100K
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M030 Sway bars with Delrin from RSBarn
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Use Helium so your car would be lighter! <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/biggrin.png" class="smilie" alt="" />
Greg
'92 cab. Guards Red/Black.
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I'm with Greg...use Helium for less unsprung weight.
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