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#43 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to justatroll For This Useful Post: | Tcoat (01-13-2016) |
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#44 | |
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Senior Member
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It is a tank there Mav not a compressor. A simple drier on an air compressor will give the same results as far as moisture goes. The temp fluctuations are minimal at best and only really apply under very heavy use. In a race car it may make sense. In a street driven car there is zero benefit.
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Racecar spelled backwards is Racecar, because Racecar.
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#46 |
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Senior Member
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#47 |
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hey you, yeah you <3
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Any pics? I dont see anything green in my car....well.....anything legally green....
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Got my TRD wheels and TRD louvers. Thanks!!!
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#48 | |
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Tire pressure changes can dramatically alter the handling of a vehicle, with standard atmospheric air the temperature increases lets say 3 psi after an autox run or lapping session. By using dry air (typically accomplished with nitrogen) you can reduce the pressure change, lets just make stuff up and say it reduces the increase by 1 psi.
To the average person, doesn't make a lick of difference. To the hardcore competitive guy that means he starts his day +1 psi over standard air, he's 1 psi closer to his optimal temperature, the tires will react more predictably sooner in the run, if there's an unanticipated handling problem (under/oversteer) that would heat up the fronts or the rears disproportionately or unexpectedly with nitrogen/dry air the pressure change will be lessened reducing the impact of the problem vs. atmospheric air. I remember doing some testing about a decade ago, these were go kart tires and my dad had access to a house sized nitrogen tank at work, nobody would miss a bit here or there, one of the perks you could say. We saw maybe 0.5 psi difference at the absolute most and our methods weren't very scientific. We deemed it wasn't worth the hassle and after a season of messing with it dropped it and put our efforts into more valuable testing time. The local championship and track records came long after we stopped bothering. I fear I may have misinterpreted your post, oh well, already wrote it. I wouldn't hesitate to use the desiccator I linked a few pages back but at this point it's not on my radar for minimizing variables, if I were to use it I'd have to spend a day re-confirming my air pressures... Quote:
![]() Edit: Easy DIY test, take one tire filled with nitrogen (courtesy of your local dealership, costco, american tire, NASA, whatever) take one tire filled with atmospheric air (stop off at a gas station on the way home drain a tire flat, fill it up with the air compressor there), let them sit in the garage overnight, equalize the pressure in the morning, let 'em sit in the sun for a few hours and measure the pressures again. You could be fancy and measure every half hour and make some nice Excel graphs, of course make sure they get equal sunlight and aren't close enough to influence each other significantly. Might do this if I get my next set of tires at costco, lets see if they offer any trackable compounds aside from RE71R and MPSS... Last edited by strat61caster; 01-15-2016 at 03:02 AM. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to strat61caster For This Useful Post: | Packofcrows (01-15-2016) |
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#49 | |
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hey you, yeah you <3
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Reading online it says it can help mpg and handling. I might try it if i ever go to track again for fun.
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Got my TRD wheels and TRD louvers. Thanks!!!
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#50 | ||
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Senior Member
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#51 | |
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not a twin owner
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Because if it is 1 psi, then someone may care (again, in a race car, I am not sure if most handheld tire pressure metter have accuracy better than 1 psi). If it is 0.05 psi, it's another story. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to mdm For This Useful Post: | Tcoat (01-15-2016) |
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#52 |
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Ned flanders
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In before a year from now when OP cant get chrome caps off of his tpms cause their frozen on
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797Performance.com
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#53 | |
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not a twin owner
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OK, here is an attempt at estimating these effects. We want to estimate how different is the response of tire pressure to temperature changes depending on the gas used to fill the tire. You are guesstimating that using regular moist air will cause the response to be 150% compared to dry air or pure nitrogen (3 psi vs. 2 psi). Now we all now that PV=nRT. So the response of pressure to temperature change will depend on nR/V. V is constant for our purpose (there may be changes of tire volume with pressure and temperature, but they are minute and more importantly will not differ between different gases). Therefore the response will depend on nR only. n is the amount of gas in moles, so for a given volume it will be determined by the gas molar volume, which only slightly between water vapor (24.5), oxygen and nitrogen (both 22.4) For R the difference is bigger, 0.297 for O2, 0.26 for N2, H2O vapor 0.462. (all figures taken form the internets ;-) Now I am making a few assumptions here, which may be not generally correct, but I think they are close enough to correct for our purposes. If there is a physicist in the room, please stand up and correct me. First, I am assuming that n and R change with temperature and pressure will be either negligible or its difference between our gases will be tiny. Second, I am assuming that n and R of a mixture of gases can be approximated by the weighted average of n & R of component gases. Third, I am assuming that dry air is 79% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, and that's it. Fourth, I am assuming that moist air is 5% water vapor + 95% dry air. This is a worst case scenario, there is this much water vapor in the air at 100% relaive humidity at 40C (104F). Normally,at lower temperatures and lower RH there will be much less. Fifth, I may have mixed up volumes and masses somewhere, but I think these are similar enough between our gases to ignore this. Now, to the results. nR for dry air is 6.0, for nitrogen 5.82, for water vapor 11.32. this would indicate a huge difference in response of pressure to temperature change, with water vapor's response about 189% of dry air response, and about 194% of pure nitrogen response. BUT let's not forget that we do not have pure water vapor in the tires, we have 5% max, usually much less. For 5% water vapor in air my figures are 104% compared to dry air and 107% compared to nitrogen. This is FAR less than 150%, and once again, I assumed using insanely tropical air, normally the effect will be much smaller. Last edited by mdm; 01-15-2016 at 10:18 AM. Reason: typos |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to mdm For This Useful Post: | humfrz (01-15-2016), strat61caster (01-15-2016) |
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#54 |
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Senior Member
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#55 | |
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I do appreciate you chemistrying it up though. ![]() Edit: I do have some reservations about your math as I am not saying there is a 150% difference, rather my example is ~3% difference between the two scenarios (~30+3 vs ~30+2), but I am not too bothered by it. Like I said, I'll actually run an experiment if I ever get my tires filled with nitrogen. |
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#56 | |
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Senior Member
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This immediately set off a red flag in my head that perhaps you do not understand something. For a sealed system (tire), n (number of moles) and R (ideal gas constant) will not vary AT ALL. They are constants and by definition will not change during this experiment. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to justatroll For This Useful Post: | strat61caster (01-15-2016) |
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