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Question on tires air pressure gauge
My air tire pressure seems to be unreliable. Inaccurate reading.
Which tire pressure gauge is more reliable/accurate digital or analog?
Which brand are reliable/accurate?
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
How do you know yours is inaccurate? Is it digital?
I still use analog gages, I got a couple recently from that river store since my old ones the seals were dried out and it was pretty obvious I wasn't going to be able to get parts for them anymore.
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Originally Posted by
Setec Astronomy
How do you know yours is inaccurate? Is it digital?
No, it's a dial gauge.
This is one of the question I forgot to ask, how can I check if the gauge is inaccurate. I going by, I get a different reading when I check the tire pressure first thing in the morning. I'll will get 33 PSI one morning then the next I'll get 40 PSI and so on.
Even though the gauge will read I have 35 PSI in the tires including the spare the dash TPMS warning light will come on. The dealer said there nothing wrong with with the car or TPMS system.
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Super Member
Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
I believe they sell a digital gauge made by Craftsman that’s supposed to be the best 1. Look it up on youtube, they’ve got videos on it.
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Originally Posted by
java
No, it's a dial gauge.
This is one of the question I forgot to ask, how can I check if the gauge is inaccurate. I going by, I get a different reading when I check the tire pressure first thing in the morning. I'll will get 33 PSI one morning then the next I'll get 40 PSI and so on.
Even though the gauge will read I have 35 PSI in the tires including the spare the dash TPMS warning light will come on. The dealer said there nothing wrong with with the car or TPMS system.
Ok, this is more complicated--temperature has a direct effect on pressure. So one morning could have been a different temperature (change is about 1 psi per 10°F), plus driving will heat up the tires. Also moisture content in the air in the tire can change that, too.
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Originally Posted by
Setec Astronomy
Ok, this is more complicated--temperature has a direct effect on pressure. So one morning could have been a different temperature (change is about 1 psi per 10°F), plus driving will heat up the tires. Also moisture content in the air in the tire can change that, too.
Does the TPMS plays a big role in how the tire pressure behaves on cold days?
I check the tires pressure first thing in the morning before driving it. If I do drive it I make sure the tire pressure is at least 35 P?SI and cold without driving I make sure it's 32 PSI.
The last time I put air in the tire it was -3 degrees according to the dash outdoor temperature gauge.
On a SRT Durango I'm trying to get the dash tire pressure gauge to read the same as a tire air pressure gauge. It 's always off from 5 to 10 PSI from the dash to the tire gauge. It's enough to drive someone nuts.
Is there a trick to get the PSI to have the same reading? Like driving a certain amount of mileage before checking tire pressure or tire have to be a certain temperature before checking.
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Originally Posted by
Eldorado2k
I believe they sell a digital gauge made by Craftsman that’s supposed to be the best 1. Look it up on youtube, they’ve got videos on it.
Is it the Craftsman model number MS4376?
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Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Originally Posted by
java
Does the TPMS plays a big role in how the tire pressure behaves on cold days?
No, it has nothing to do with it.
Originally Posted by
java
I check the tires pressure first thing in the morning before driving it. If I do drive it I make sure the tire pressure is at least 35 P?SI and cold without driving I make sure it's 32 PSI.
The last time I put air in the tire it was -3 degrees according to the dash outdoor temperature gauge.
This is your problem. The TPMS monitor runs off a battery, that has to last 5-10 years. The battery is activated by the motion of the wheel, otherwise it would be on all the time (even when you're not driving the car) and wouldn't last very long. If you check your TPMS without moving the car, it will be showing you the pressure reading from the last time you drove the car, when it was probably warmer than -3 and the tires were warm from driving.
Originally Posted by
java
On a SRT Durango I'm trying to get the dash tire pressure gauge to read the same as a tire air pressure gauge. It 's always off from 5 to 10 PSI from the dash to the tire gauge. It's enough to drive someone nuts.
I would trust the TPMS system to do it's job. Or is the problem you're having is that you get a TPMS light and you're trying to find out which wheel is low? Mine has individual readings so I don't have that problem, but I understand a lot of vehicles don't.
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Super Member
Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
Mine doesn’t I have to check each tire to see but most of the time when my light goes on all four need air.
Treat it like it's the only one in the world.
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Super Member
Re: Question on tires air pressure gauge
I often get a similar variation in the readings
between the tire gauge and the TPMSs when
I either do the exchanges from the Summer
tire/wheel assemblies to the Winters (and vice
versa); or from scheduled tire rotations.
A few miles being driven down the road;
hitting the “DISMISS” message in the DIC
(until it finally goes away); or the OBDII;
is the usual cure.
Hope it isn’t that your TPMSs need replaced.
Bob
"Be wary of the man who urges an action in which he himself incurs no risk."
~Joaquin de Setanti
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