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| Mechanical Maintenance (Oil, Fluids, Break-In, Servicing) Everything related to the mechanical maintenance of the FR-S and BRZ |
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#43 | |||||
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I did an experiment with Nitrogen and race tires for a college class a couple years back. I have a lot of data that proves and disproves a lot of BS about Nitrogen filled tires. I figured I would pick a few quotes to reply to and then share a little.
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So why do we want dry air or pure nitrogen? That gets answered below. Quote:
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So I did testing with multiple 100% pure nitrogen tanks, 3 sets of race tires, multiple race weekends, tires that were dry mounted with dual valve stems for proper purging and ones that were mounted normally and I took every measure to ensure no moisture and no "regular air" was inside my race tires. I did comparison testing, session after session on multiple tracks/multiple weekends and back to back with tires that used regular air, lube-mounted etc. NO DIFFERENCE, in fact sometimes the predictability in pressures was worse with the Nitrogen tires. But why? The answer is controlling the environment is practically impossible. Even with dry mounting tires, even with dual valve stems and lots of purging, it's insanely difficult to ensure not one molecule of moisture is inside that carcass and even if after all of that Nitrogen still expands/contracts with temperature pretty much just the same as regular, low-moisture, air. I'm sure that NASCAR and F1 teams are better at controlling what's in their tires and I'm sure they have different results but I also know, because Matchette explained it once that it's also a function of safety because Nitrogen is inert and not flammable. I've scoured data from other racers/teams that have done the same testing, taken the same data and experienced the same results. 2 questions remain: Question 1: So why do lots of racers have Nitrogen tanks in their trailers? Answer: convenience. That's it. They are cheap to fill, and you can fill LOTS of race tires on 1 tank-full (like a 100 or so!). No pumps, no compressors. They are used because they 'simplify the weekend' and that's a very important function of racing; simplification. Question 2: Is there ANY benefit putting nitrogen in my tires, especially if I'm not racing and don't care about the convenience of an air tank? Answer1: Without moisture you greatly reduce corrosive properties that may exist to damage the inside of the wheel or the wheel rim, but this is not common enough to be much of a concern for most drivers. Answer2: If you somehow are able to take the necessary steps to ensure no moisture and only 100% nitrogen are inside your tire then you may see a benefit on your daily driver where your tires won't deflate as quickly. However, due to how often we change tires, set pressures etc, the time frame to realize any benefits from Nitrogen's "large molecule" advantage will most likely not be realized. And when Malt says "Snake oil" that's why. The juice isn't worth the squeeze. Answer 3: Long haul truckers who drive to lots of time zones and elevation changes and industrial machines. In this case they would use expensive machines to purge, measure and eliminate moisture from a tire while replacing the gasses. Finally: I will be adding a Nitrogen tank to my enclosed trailer for the race track because I, too, like the added convenience.
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SCCA T4 - FRS
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#44 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
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I agree with everything you've said in principal with a few small caveats.
Yes, Nitrogen is inert and non-flammable. Air is non-flammable as well. What normal tire fills have is oxygen which is an oxidizer. That's sort of a silly reason to condone nitrogen fills though because compressed air is exactly the same makeup as atmospheric air, just under pressure. BUT WAIT!... tires are under-pressure which means you get lots of oxygen if a tires blows, which fuels the fire right?! Not exactly. Not sure if any of you have much experience with vehicle fires and tires exploding due to flame impingement but the main concern there is the explosive force of the rapidly expanding gas, not the sudden on rush of normal air providing an oxidizing agent and nitrogen filled tires will have exactly the same effect as a normal air filled tire in that regard. I'm quite sure that I've dealt with hundreds (if not thousands) more exploding tires due to fire than 99.9% of the forum goers here. ![]() As for filling tires while at the track... ![]() Weighs less, takes up almost no room, free to use, no refill cost, no electricity requirements, not limited by hose length from the trailer, etc... Far superior to electric compressors or carrying around gas cylinders IMO. |
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#45 |
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Join Date: Nov 2014
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Race teams use nitrogen. Not because it's expensive.
But Jeez, don't put it in your street car. Buy flowers for the wife instead. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Hoosier Daddy For This Useful Post: | Malt (11-20-2014) |
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#46 |
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Car Nut
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Unless your driving a race car or flying a plane, don't bother.
All in my opinion. |
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#47 |
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BAE
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its free @ my costco and i can easily tell them to top off my tires. If it takes me the same amount of time at a gas station, i'll rather get it done with Nitrogen.
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#48 |
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Senior Member
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You have a pretty good sense of humor. Heck, speaking of simplicity, let's just inflate the tire by blowing in the valve stem with our mouths!
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SCCA T4 - FRS
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to rice_classic For This Useful Post: | lastexile1987 (11-20-2014), Malt (11-20-2014) |
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#49 |
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Join Date: Sep 2014
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We'll, i don't mind opposition, as a reply to MALT and rice_classic, i do agree there are no significant benefits of nitrogen over dry air. But not every country and gas station have air dry system in their compressors, actually i would believe i haven't seen anyone using such in Estonia. Checking the weather channel i see relative humidity of 90%, so i don't want to fill tires with that air right now, considering the pressure and density rise in tire as it's compressed, therefore can hold less humidity and condense water starts to form.
But as for testing, maybe autoX is not the best Technic to test such thing, i would propose drifting to be much more adequate Motorsport because this is where tires get some heat, i myself, have measured measly 180 degrees C from 10-15min practice run. Sadly i don't have have proper weather to do tests myself(all icy and slippery - less heat buildup). About someone running 4 years with same tires, quite common as not all people in a world drive 80k in a year because they live in much smaller country and don't have long distance travel to work daily, to get for an example, the tires this car ships with should last approx 65'000 km(yes i know, on a prius maybe), but still, now if you are some grandfather visiting his son every week and drive 50km for that. Some countries even see snow and have separate tires with rims for winter, again your summer tires should last forever - considering not drifting daily. So please, let's keep our minds and heart open toward fellow FRS/GT86/BRZ owners, we are all good, smart, all-knowing and beautiful. |
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