Yes some here have done this ........ but My question is - - is it worth it ... It's certainly more expensive and time consuming to use Nitrogen .......... and IMHO the benefit is sooooooooo small compared to the effort ............. Mike :thumbup:Has anyone tried using nitrogen in their tires to control expansion from heat?
Yes some here have done this ........ but My question is - - is it worth it ... It's certainly more expensive and time consuming to use Nitrogen .......... and IMHO the benefit is sooooooooo small compared to the effort ............. Mike :thumbup:
100% nitrogen not needed for normal folks.
Well my tire guy did use nitrogen but no charge. I have to say I don't notice any difference but then again can you really say they do put it in :lecturef_smilie:how would the average person know if it was done..?? Seems more of a gimmick next it will be helium to take some wieght off the tires....:roflblack:
Makes you wonder if the Costco guys were putting it in their pockets! My local Costco uses nitrogen as part of the mount and balance package for new tires.I asked the Costco tire guys if they'd fill my Spyder tires with nitrogen and they said they would but I passed on the price which I think was like $20/tire. That's a "you've got to be :cus: me" deal.
Inflating tires with nitrogen does not exempt you from having to check tire pressure routinely.
2- nitrogen will not hold moisture .
It also reduces the pressure drop over time as the nitrogen molecules are larger than oxygen, and don't "bleed" as easily
nitrogen is a dry, inert gas that does not contain moisture.
Regular air is almost 80% nitrogen so you are adding only another 20% by going full nitro.
And the moisture content is important only if you have steel rims. Alloy rims do not rust so water vapor is not important (at the levels you would find in a tire).
The reason NASCAR uses nitrogen is because it is more volume stable as the tire heats up from use. You would not notice this difference in your passenger car tires.