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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Nitrogen filled tyres?


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Im sure most or you have heard about Nitrogen filled tyres (Ive only heard about the nissan gtr having this),my local tyre dealer is now offering this for £10 for all tyres with free top ups.

 

i was reading the info and benefits over air are -

 

improved handling

less wear

improved economy

 

All sounds good to me? what do you think anyone had this done

Edited by skippyboyo1 (see edit history)
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If you click 'edit post' and then click 'go advanced' you can change your title. I'm not going to do it because it made me smile :)

 

£10 seems a lot TBH, but it's not a bad thing to do. You probably won't notice a huge difference though unless you do a before and after test on a track/private test road.

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If you click 'edit post' and then click 'go advanced' you can change your title. I'm not going to do it because it made me smile :)

 

£10 seems a lot TBH, but it's not a bad thing to do. You probably won't notice a huge difference though unless you do a before and after test on a track/private test road.

 

ive no idea what your talking about? ;)

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If you click 'edit post' and then click 'go advanced' you can change your title. I'm not going to do it because it made me smile :)

 

£10 seems a lot TBH, but it's not a bad thing to do. You probably won't notice a huge difference though unless you do a before and after test on a track/private test road.

 

£10?? Its standard here! +1 with gaz

 

how much can you get it for then? this is the first time ive seen it so ive no idea

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I'm pretty sure Micheldever Tyres (big tyre depot in southern England) charge a bit extra for nitrogen filling. I've never bothered with it. I don't drive spiritedly enough to warrent it. Also, when the tyres need a top-up I'm not going to drive several miles to where I bought the tyres from, just so they can stick in 2 or 3 psi of N2 when I've got a perfectly-working foot pump in my garage.

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I'm pretty sure Micheldever Tyres (big tyre depot in southern England) charge a bit extra for nitrogen filling. I've never bothered with it. I don't drive spiritedly enough to warrent it. Also, when the tyres need a top-up I'm not going to drive several miles to where I bought the tyres from, just so they can stick in 2 or 3 psi of N2 when I've got a perfectly-working foot pump in my garage.

 

true however they need pumping up less as nitrogen molecules are bigger than air so less escapes.wow check me out

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true however they need pumping up less as nitrogen molecules are bigger than air so less escapes.wow check me out

 

Even if that's true, I'm not sure it'll make a measurable difference. I believe they offer it because nitrogen is inert and doesn't contain things like moisture.

 

Air is 78% nitrogen anyway. If the other constituents like oxygen, carbon dioxide etc escape more readily than nitrogen, then every time I go round the "air loss - top up" cycle I'll be gradually increasing the concentration of nitrogen in the tyre.

Edited by stevie_b (see edit history)
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true however they need pumping up less as nitrogen molecules are bigger than air so less escapes.wow check me out

 

This is true. Tony Doyle, the track cyclist once ran helium filled tyres, as a weight reducing measure, but only for shorter races as the helium escaped very quickly due to its tiny molecular size.

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Guest Supra-Simon

I run on nitrogen filled Perelli P-Zero Roso's ......

 

Improved handling - longs it's dry and the roads flat

 

Less wear - well not really noticed any difference

 

Improved economy - well I drive a TT supra... Economy not really on my mind

 

:)

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I run on nitrogen filled Perelli P-Zero Roso's ......

 

Improved handling - longs it's dry and the roads flat

 

Less wear - well not really noticed any difference

 

Improved economy - well I drive a TT supra... Economy not really on my mind

 

:)

 

and there it is...im not going to bother then.cheers simon

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  • 2 weeks later...
I think it's supposed to keep the difference between hot and cold pressures lower. Meaning the pressure doesn't rise as much as the tyre gets hotter.

 

We have thought about this for SteveLs' race car but not done it yet.

 

You are correct which is why we use it in aircraft tyres, however I can't see it helping much with economy on tyres. Just means you can drive from the desert to the arctic without adjusting your pressures ;)

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I think it's supposed to keep the difference between hot and cold pressures lower. Meaning the pressure doesn't rise as much as the tyre gets hotter.

 

We have thought about this for SteveLs' race car but not done it yet.

 

Exactly, and if they don't pull a partial vacuum in the tyre before filling with nitrogen the fill is a large percentage air still. No advantages say a more stable temperature / pressure gradient in use. I don't even bother in my race cars, too much hassle, and I have nitrogen on tap here, and a vacuum pump. Once you have set the race pressures hot you just let them cool to ambient overnight and check the cold tyre pressures, and use them as your baseline. Unless you take the car to the middle east, or the arctic to race you won't see much pressure change due to ambient weather temps.

 

 

Edit: Should have read marco's post first, sorry mate ;)

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