NITROGEN INFLATED TIRES?
#2
#3
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When air is cold, it compresses. For every 10 degrees the temperature drops you lose 1 psi in your tires. Nitrogen on the other hand is a cold gas. It stays close to 1 temperature all the time. Thus, preventing a huge loss of psi in your tires. Hope this helps
#4
#5
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I used to use nitrogen in my tires when i raced stock cars. The reason for the use was that you can set your tire pressures and they will stay consistant when the tire temps rise of fall. As for using nitrogen on the street, I think that it is too pricey, Just keep a tire pressure gauge in your truck and check them when you fill up. As for longer tire life, nitrogen will actually eat the rubber over time. Just my 3 and 1/3 cents worth.
Troy
Troy
#6
#7
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BETTER AIR PRESSURE RETENTION... The single biggest reason for tire failure is lack of maintenance of tire pressure. In fact, 54 percent of all vehicles on the road have low tire pressure. Oxygen in compressed air can permeate the tire wall reducing tire pressure. With nitrogen, diffusion is 30 to 40 percent slower than oxygen. As a result, nitrogen maintains tire pressure longer than ambient air.
ENHANCED FUEL ECONOMY... Maintaining tire pressure can boost fuel economy by as much as 6 percent. Nitrogen disperses heat more quickly than ambient air. By restraining the heat in the tire and reducing rolling resistance, you get better fuel economy.
LONGER TREAD LIFE... Longer tread life. With quicker heat dispersion, you get a cooler running tire which helps extend tread life and reduce tire failure. Nitrogen also prevents oxidation which can not only lead to tread separation and belt failure but, when combined with moisture, corrode rims. In fact, moisture can result in rust flakes that can fall into the valve stem, block the valve and cause under-pressurization. It can even cause the valve stem itself to rust.
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
ENHANCED FUEL ECONOMY... Maintaining tire pressure can boost fuel economy by as much as 6 percent. Nitrogen disperses heat more quickly than ambient air. By restraining the heat in the tire and reducing rolling resistance, you get better fuel economy.
LONGER TREAD LIFE... Longer tread life. With quicker heat dispersion, you get a cooler running tire which helps extend tread life and reduce tire failure. Nitrogen also prevents oxidation which can not only lead to tread separation and belt failure but, when combined with moisture, corrode rims. In fact, moisture can result in rust flakes that can fall into the valve stem, block the valve and cause under-pressurization. It can even cause the valve stem itself to rust.
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
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#8
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ORIGINAL: parkersdropped03
ENHANCED FUEL ECONOMY... Maintaining tire pressure can boost fuel economy by as much as 6 percent. Nitrogen disperses heat more quickly than ambient air. By restraining the heat in the tire and reducing rolling resistance, you get better fuel economy.
LONGER TREAD LIFE... Longer tread life. With quicker heat dispersion, you get a cooler running tire which helps extend tread life and reduce tire failure. Nitrogen also prevents oxidation which can not only lead to tread separation and belt failure but, when combined with moisture, corrode rims. In fact, moisture can result in rust flakes that can fall into the valve stem, block the valve and cause under-pressurization. It can even cause the valve stem itself to rust.
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
ENHANCED FUEL ECONOMY... Maintaining tire pressure can boost fuel economy by as much as 6 percent. Nitrogen disperses heat more quickly than ambient air. By restraining the heat in the tire and reducing rolling resistance, you get better fuel economy.
LONGER TREAD LIFE... Longer tread life. With quicker heat dispersion, you get a cooler running tire which helps extend tread life and reduce tire failure. Nitrogen also prevents oxidation which can not only lead to tread separation and belt failure but, when combined with moisture, corrode rims. In fact, moisture can result in rust flakes that can fall into the valve stem, block the valve and cause under-pressurization. It can even cause the valve stem itself to rust.
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
Dusty
#9
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ORIGINAL: parkersdropped03
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
SLOW CHEMICAL AGING... Filling a tire with nitrogen also significantly slows the chemical aging process of the tire's rubber components. This leads to fewer catastrophic failures like blowouts. Slower aging lengthens tire core life, which yields extra retreads and lower fleet costs.
#10
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My step-grandfather just got the tires on his silverado and yukon filled with nitrogen. I was showing him my new truck and he told me I should look into getting it done. If everything parkersdropped03 says is true (it makes sense), then I may get this done. Anyone else have this done? Any input on whether you like it or not?