I never said that thumping a tire is going to give you the tire pressure, a different tone on the 2 tires(side by side) will make you think there might be an issue, that’s when you bring out the gauge.
Tire Pressure and tips for proper tire maintenance
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by hsingh_2, Apr 27, 2022.
Page 2 of 4
-
Boondock, D.Tibbitt, kemosabi49 and 1 other person Thank this.
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
IF You're Running Cheap Tires, Blowouts May Happen Often, Especially If You're Running HEAVY.
When Tires Are 25% BELOW Stated MAX AIR Pressure, They're Considered FLAT.
Cheap Tires Equal Cheap Results However Expensive Tires Do Not Equal Prolonged Results.
Sometimes It's The Stimulant Used, But We're Not Getting Into That.
Does Such "Leave A Mark or 2"??
Thumping Tires With Hammers Is Some OLD SKOOL Activity, Back To Split Rims.
You Should Hear The Littlest Tire Gremlins Screaming Back At Ya, Especially In Wintry Times, When Their Activities Are Less. They Help Stabilize The Interior Of Truck And Bus Tires But Only Under Preferred Conditions. If Your Tires Are Blowing Out At An Unusual Rate, Either Upgrade Type And Design Of Tires or Seek Assistance From The Tire Gremlin Elimination Squad At Your Local LOVE'S Truckstop.
There's A Nominal Fee For Investigation, Yet It's Worth Every Parsec Of Your Nanite Cohabilation.
It Is Most SAFE To INFLATE COLD TIRES, HOWEVER Some People Have Been Injured or Killed Doing Such Without Removing The Assembly and Inflating Inside A Tire Cage. Such Was Usual With Split Ring Setups, BUT HAS & CAN Happen With Modern Times' Rims.
It's BEST To NOT Inflate HOT TIRES or RELEASE AIR PRESSURE from HOT TIRES.
Such Also Disturbs The Flow Of Reason Which Varies In Intensity Depending Upon Terrain and Sighting Of Thong Bikini Depth (which also has been countlessly proven to disrupt the control of vehicle direction), But That's Not Directly Related To Anything In This Post.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
This Post Has Not Been A Promotional Advertisement For LOVE'S Truck Stop Tire Shop Service, Or FUEL ISLAND Hot, Cold, Flat, Exploded Tire Service.
Thank You For Your Understanding!!Last edited: Apr 27, 2022
Reason for edit: edit for reason, part 2.PumpkinOvalHead, hsingh_2 and Diesel Dave Thank this. -
Check the decal in the cab for the recommended tire pressure for your truck.The number on the tire is max pressure.
-
Tire blowouts happen but most of them are due to operating tires at too-low tire pressure. If you are religious in checking your tire pressure every day before you start driving you greatly lessen your chances of having a tire blowout. Some blowouts are frightening. Many of them are not at all. Some you may not notice until someone gets your attention to point it out. Get a few $15 truck tire pressure gauges and get a $30 air hose that connects to the truck's air system so you can air any tire anywhere, in case you are not near a truck stop with an air compressor. Don't let the fact drivers tell stories about some adventure make you afraid of your own tires. Just keep your tires at proper air pressure and you lessen your "danger" by about 90%. The proper air pressure is printed on the side of every tire. Even if a tire goes flat or blows out it's an inconvenience not some big adventure.
-
-
-
Hitting the tires with a thumber just tells you if the tire has air pressure or not. It's not reliable way to determine if a tire is slightly low on pressure. Numerous experiments show that thumping the tire MIGHT tell you if the tire is 30-50 psi too low, but it won't tell you if it's 10-20 psi too low. Running tires 10-20 psi too low will cause it to heat up and eventually fail.
Measure tire pressure at the start of your day before you drive. As you drive, tires will warm up and the pressure will read higher. Don't let air out to get back to the 100-110 psi you wanted to see when you started. Let the tire pressure increase as you drive and leave it alone until the next morning. Many drivers use a tire gauge before they start driving. As they drive and stop for other reasons during the day they may thump or kick the tires to verify they are not flat or grossly deflated. -
Boondock, D.Tibbitt, Val_Caldera and 2 others Thank this.
-
And some drivers, believe it or not, NEVER rotate the air in their tires! SMH
Boondock, Super_Trucker, D.Tibbitt and 3 others Thank this. -
Boondock, D.Tibbitt, Val_Caldera and 1 other person Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 2 of 4