i did a lot of playing in my loads of free time. we all know how important tire preasure is for fuel economy, saftey,tire longetivity etc....toyota/pontiac recomends 32 psi front 32 psi rear this is how much it would fluctuate through the canadian seasons where i live if i did not not touch my tire preasure again.PSI TEMPERATURE22 -2824 -2026 -1228 -530 032 +834 +16 (ESTIMATED DATA)36 +32 (ESTIMATED DATA)i would recommend everyony buy a digital tire preasure gadge. you can all see the the flucuation as the temperature changes.
What Coratz is saying (and correct me if I'm wrong), is that as the temperature drops, the air pressure inside your tire drops (because cold air is more dense, meaning it still has the same mass, just occupies a smaller volume). I would assume that the recommended pressure is based on a certain air temperature. I can see temperature around here fluctuate between -30 C and 0 C on the same day. Do I adjust for this 8 psi difference? No. Should I? Maybe.
2003 Satellite AWD Two Tone, traded off at 180,126 kmNow the (fourth) catalytic converter is someone else's problem Now driving a 2007 Dodge Grand Caravan
quote:as the temperature drops, the air pressure inside your tire dropsthis i am aware of.....just a little confused w/ the layout of the post.....hehe its all good.....no need to explain
2003 Shadow Vibe Base 5spd - 53,000 MilesFlowmaster 60 series exhaust - Short Ram Intake SystemKonig Kaliber 17x7 Rims w/ 225-45-17 Kumho Ecsta 711's - Hotchkis Springs - Progress Rear anti-sway Bar My Vibe is FOR SALE: $8900
quote:What Coratz is saying (and correct me if I'm wrong), is that as the temperature drops, the air pressure inside your tire drops (because cold air is more dense, meaning it still has the same mass, just occupies a smaller volume). I would assume that the recommended pressure is based on a certain air temperature. I can see temperature around here fluctuate between -30 C and 0 C on the same day. Do I adjust for this 8 psi difference? No. Should I? Maybe.A 30 degree change in one day has got to be pretty rare, but it does make sense to check the pressure more frequently when the temperature is changing and always maintain the specified values. (I cheat a bit in the Fall and go a couple of pounds high, knowing it will come down with the falling temperature.) This is also why you should check the pressures "cold", before you have done much driving and heated up the tires. By way of example, I drove a Corvette a couple of years ago which had the factory dash readout for tire pressures. Not only could you watch them go up for about the first 20 miles at highway speed, you could even see that the fronts, which were smaller and carrying a bit more load, went up a couple of ponds more than the rears! Some race cars use relief valves to keep the pressures from getting too high. This works fine until there's a long yellow, which cools the tires down and loses so much pressure that the handling goes off completely.