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I was always told that tires with nitrogen will not see a big change in pressure during cold winter weather???
BIG F
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Very Active Member
Lets think about this. A small car tire holds about 1 cubic foot of air. Before adding the nitrogen the tire is full of ambient air. You add a few pounds of nitrogen which is diluted by the air already in that tire. So what are you really accomplishing?
2010 RTSM5
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Well, the OP wanted to know about the experience using nitrogen in Spyder tires. I had my front CTs installed at Costco. They filled with nitrogen as they always do for tire installation. Over time, did I notice easier steering? Nope. Did I find the tire pressure fluxuated less? Nope. Did I realize any benefits at all? Nope. Do I check and adjust my tire pressure the same as always? Yup. So, Your call..... Jim
PS. I like the look of the green valve stem caps.
2005 Windveil Blue Premium Mustang Convertible
2008 Honda GL1800/California Sidecar Trike, SOLD
2014 Platinum Silver Satin Spyder RTL, SOLD
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One thing I’ll say no matter what you want in the rear at least, if you take in in to be serviced check your tire pressure when you get your bike back. Found out today they’d added 10 psi to the rear and I didn’t know it.
2015 Pearl White RTL
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When Consumer Reports tested Nitrogen in tires, they generated the most discussion on their boards they ever had.
Conclusion: Nitrogen seeps out slower, but not slow enough to eliminate the need to regularly check tires. Only real benefit is high pressure situations like commercial truck tires.
Other thoughts.
1. They were really skeptical about people reporting increases in gas mileage.
2. They did not test the thought, "if you fill your tires with air, the oxygen is more likely to permeate out of the tires before the nitrogen and over time you end up with a higher concentration of nitrogen. [they] have not checked this but it seems possible."
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Very Active Member
Originally Posted by Zip
Why, please explain?
because it is an inert gas it will not damage from moisture the interior of a wheel or tpms. at my place it is common to do something called a bead clean. that is when the beads of a tire oxidize or in the case of a chrome or steel wheel start to rust and you get a leak at the rim/tire bead. by using nitrogen you slow down this process. since most tires are replaced in under 5 years the oxidation process for the inside of a tire won't matter as much but most don't replace their wheels unless they damage them. proper tire inflation of any type of gas extends tire life while a dry gas will extend the life of a wheel and the valve core of a tpms shaft, i have seen many times valve cores go bad
in just 2-3 years and most especially from galvanic fusion on european cars.
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Very Active Member
Okay, I'll add to the threadcount My choice is to forgo the N2 mostly based on cost but also acknowledging that the major reason for pressure change is the moisture content of the air put in the tire.
If I lived in Houston with 90% humidity and could get N2 cheaply, I'd probably run it, and I am a stickler for tire pressures. I obsess over whether both front tires are equal pressure. I just balanced out my lawn tractor tires with 12 psi in the fronts and 8.5 psi in the rears.... I'll refill the portable air tank and balance out the Spyder tires, and get new batteries for the FOBOs before we hit the road...just a little cold this morning at 5 degrees for a Ryde. Moisture in the air here is quite low at only 18% humidity in the house now.
Your ryde, your choice, but do check your pressures often. Its a Safety Thing.
07 Shadows, Aero, Spirit gone but not forgotten
03 Harley Sportster, 07 RK moved on
11 RT- 76,000 mi, 15 RT-S- 44,000 mi, traded for current 15 base RT and 16 F3T
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I have been using helium in my Spyder tires and makes my Spyder a lot lighter and my tires don't wear out.
2017 F3 Limited in Intense Red Pearl
2008 Triumph Rocket (SOLD)
2002 Honda VTX 1800 C ( SOLD)
2014 Triumph Thunderbird Commander
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Originally Posted by AeroPilot
Okay, I'll add to the threadcount My choice is to forgo the N2 mostly based on cost but also acknowledging that the major reason for pressure change is the moisture content of the air put in the tire.
If I lived in Houston with 90% humidity and could get N2 cheaply, I'd probably run it, and I am a stickler for tire pressures. I obsess over whether both front tires are equal pressure. I just balanced out my lawn tractor tires with 12 psi in the fronts and 8.5 psi in the rears.... I'll refill the portable air tank and balance out the Spyder tires, and get new batteries for the FOBOs before we hit the road...just a little cold this morning at 5 degrees for a Ryde. Moisture in the air here is quite low at only 18% humidity in the house now.
Your ryde, your choice, but do check your pressures often. Its a Safety Thing.
Had a friend like that, he made a set of hoses so he could fill all 4 tires at the same time at the exact same pressure
2010 RTSM5
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The air we breath is about 80% nitrogen. Why pay for it. The big thing is to clean your rims where they seal before putting on new tires.
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Originally Posted by Ex-Rocket
I'll do you one better. I filled my ex with nitrogen, and she floated away.
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Originally Posted by Big F
I was always told that tires with nitrogen will not see a big change in pressure during cold winter weather???
BIG F
Yes.....nor in HOT weather either but it is NOT because of the nitrogen.
It IS because when nitrogen is taken out of the air and compressed into a liquid in a tank,
pretty much ALL of the water vapor is removed.
It is the water vapor that causes the biggest swing in pressure as temp's go up and down.
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