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Airing up from the spare
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Airing up from the spare
I saw this done years ago but have not seen it since or any reference to it.
I used to wheel with a guy who rather than having a compressor or air tank etc, would over fill his spare (he actually had two spares) then for the trip home after having aired down at the start of the "offroad" part of a days wheeling, he had a length of hose with an inflator on the end. He attached the other end of the hose to the spare and would re-inflate his tyres. This was so simple.
I have often thought about doing something similar. Is there such a thing available or was this a home made invention?
I never asked how much he had to put in the spare etc, i imagine it wuld have to be a lot as it would always have to be at a higher pressure in order to inflate the others.
Can anyone shed any more light on this?
I used to wheel with a guy who rather than having a compressor or air tank etc, would over fill his spare (he actually had two spares) then for the trip home after having aired down at the start of the "offroad" part of a days wheeling, he had a length of hose with an inflator on the end. He attached the other end of the hose to the spare and would re-inflate his tyres. This was so simple.
I have often thought about doing something similar. Is there such a thing available or was this a home made invention?
I never asked how much he had to put in the spare etc, i imagine it wuld have to be a lot as it would always have to be at a higher pressure in order to inflate the others.
Can anyone shed any more light on this?
'89 SWB Soft Top, 6.5:1 Calmini gears, rear Lockright, 31s, pwr steering. 1.3 16vmpfi 1300 going in
Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Re: Airing up from the spare
I think you might find that the reason people don't do it these days is because buying a 12v portable compressor isn't an expensive option anymore like it once was.DiddyZook wrote:I saw this done years ago but have not seen it since or any reference to it.
If God did not intend for us to eat animals, then why did he make them out of meat?
Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
" Some days you are the bug; some days you are the wind screen"
I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.Jeff80 wrote:And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
why not just fit an airtank?
They are pretty cheap from truck wreckers, or an old scuba tank, and can easily be fitted under most 4wds. Not much additional weight and probably alot safer.
They are pretty cheap from truck wreckers, or an old scuba tank, and can easily be fitted under most 4wds. Not much additional weight and probably alot safer.
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|.........SUZUKI..........| ||'|";, ____.
|_..._..._______===|=||_|__|..., ]
(@)'(@)"""''"**|(@)(@)*****''(@)
|.........SUZUKI..........| ||'|";, ____.
|_..._..._______===|=||_|__|..., ]
(@)'(@)"""''"**|(@)(@)*****''(@)
yeh i was thinking this too,v840 wrote:why not just fit an airtank?
They are pretty cheap from truck wreckers, or an old scuba tank, and can easily be fitted under most 4wds. Not much additional weight and probably alot safer.
problem is a 33x12.5x15 inch tyre holds about 45litres of air.
So if you had a 45litre tank, youd need to have 112.5psi tank pressure.
with a 10 or 20 lite tank youd need about 200-300psi.
so i guess its just easier to get a compressor.
Truck tyres designed for it, yes, but most light truck/passenger vehicle tyres have a maximum inflation pressure (stated on the sidewall) of about 50 psi.Shadow wrote:I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.Jeff80 wrote:And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
George Carlin, an American Comedian said; "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realise that half of them are stupider than that".
My 35 BFG Muds have a max inflation pressure of 35psi. No way I would be putting 85-100psi in itDAMKIA wrote:Truck tyres designed for it, yes, but most light truck/passenger vehicle tyres have a maximum inflation pressure (stated on the sidewall) of about 50 psi.Shadow wrote:I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.Jeff80 wrote:And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
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I believe its a maximum operating pressure, not a maximum inflation pressure.DAMKIA wrote:Truck tyres designed for it, yes, but most light truck/passenger vehicle tyres have a maximum inflation pressure (stated on the sidewall) of about 50 psi.Shadow wrote:I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.Jeff80 wrote:And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
remove the valve core if you want to seat the bead easier..can add a bit of dish washing liquid or something similar (that wont do damage to the rubber) to help the bead pop over the rimShadow wrote:I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.
trucks run any pressue from 65 psi right up to 120.. all depends on the tyre size, as well as the load carried.. 600/650/750r16 anything from 60-80.. 8.25r16 90-100psi and for the big buggers (11r22.5 / 295/80r22.5) etc see between 100 and 120
anything over 50psi I'd be wanting to put it in a safety cage before inflating any further..
1988 351W GQ wagon
Nah, see when seating a bead, you need a large VOLUME of air, not pressure, whilst the bead is seating your loosing air at a rapid rate, and not building pressure, until the bead is seated then pressurising beginsShadow wrote:I dont think 85 psi is anything to be worried about, most trucks run up to 100psi. Perhaps a tyre guy can chime in here, but i would expect when seating a bead you run some pretty high pressures.Jeff80 wrote:And you will only get approx half the air out, IE: one tire at 0PSI and a spare at 20 PSI, it will stop pushing air in to the flat tire at 10PSI as it will then be of equal pressure in each.DAMKIA wrote:Although having ANY tyre at 200 psi would be a worry....even 85 would scare the crap out of me if I was anywhere near it. Far to dangerous to even contemplate.Shadow wrote:Wouldnt be hard to make one, need a regular tyre inflator, a bit of hose, and a clip-on shrader connector on the other end instead of a compressor.
The maths.
There is an inverse relationship between pressure and volume, so a tyre at 14psi guage (=28psi real) has twice as much air as a tyre at 0psi guage(14psi real).
At 0 psi on your guage there is actually 14psi, as a guage only measure relative pressure, not absolute pressure, and at near sea-level there is 1 atmosphere of pressure which is approximately 14psi.
A tyre at 32psi has 1.4375 times as much air as a tyre at 18psi.
So say you have to air up 4 tyres from 18psi to 32psi, you need 3 times as much air in your spare, which equals 112.5psi guage (26.5 real).
Say you air down to 10psi, and back up to 32, spare needs 200psi.
If you had two spares, 18psi to 32psi, your spares would need to be running 86psi.
So it really depends on what pressure you want to air down to. If you go 18 to 32 and have 2 spares its doable, but if you have 1 spare and want to go from 10 to 32, then your buggered.
Remember that you have to find someone with a 200psi compressor to begin with.
Perhaps the fact that no one does it now says enough in itself
Hope this makes sense...
Wanted: Car trailer or beaver tail truck, let me know what you got
ORbazzle wrote:You CAN use a HAND pump to seat a bead.
Just use an old pushbike inner tube between tyre bead and rim lip to seal the gap. Pull out as tyre seals up.
Bazzle
http://www.fugly.com/videos/5855/fix-yo ... -fire.html
" Some days you are the bug; some days you are the wind screen"
dkd
I use this method to pump up my sierra tyres, works great, but I normally reinflate from 10 to about 20psi for highway pressures. I made it up for about 30$ and carry it with me cause I was frustrated with the reliability of my ARB compressor.
you know you want one
Nah, see when seating a bead, you need a large VOLUME of air, not pressure, whilst the bead is seating your loosing air at a rapid rate, and not building pressure, until the bead is seated then pressurising begins[/quote]
i popped a 35 inch claw off the bead bias i reseated it with a bushranger comresser i was amazed it never went down
cheers mick
i popped a 35 inch claw off the bead bias i reseated it with a bushranger comresser i was amazed it never went down
cheers mick
big difference in max load when the tyre is cold & there is no weight on itchops wrote:max pressure for max loadShadow wrote:I believe its a maximum operating pressure, not a maximum inflation pressure.
as apposed to being run at 110km/hr and holding 2 tonne of 4wd.
i would imagine 85psi when its being used as a spare is not that big a deal
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