Oddly enough, having just last year written some control software for a simulated altitude training machine, you'd think I'd remember that little detail, wouldn't you?
But I thought thermal stability was a big selling point, which, if it's not due to density, must be due to dryness?
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey


WOW! KB is more learned than I thought (although with 10,000 members I guess you might expect a brain cell or two).
Thanks heaps for the replies.
My wife lectures Thermal Physics (among other things) at Auckland Uni. and we came to a stalemate on this. Never thought of the moisture!
Guess our minds must be too highly trained, Magicthies!
"Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin (1706-90)
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending to much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it." - Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
"Motorcycling is not inherently dangerous. It is, however, EXTREMELY unforgiving of inattention, ignorance, incompetence and stupidity!" - Anonymous
"Live to Ride, Ride to Live"
There's a Ferrari touring car racing team in the warehouse next to me.
According to the head mechanic they use nitrogen to prevent moisture getting into the tyres.
He also said that when they go racing, they use nitrogen tanks to power their workshop air-tools.
What causes all of the air in a tyre to suddenly rush to the top? Is that Henry's Law at work or something altogether more sinister?
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

Filling your tyres with Nitrogen is a good way to get better performance and safety from your tyres. Nitrogen will leak three or four times more slowly than compressed air, which can lead to some pretty useful benefits like:
Stable tyre pressure.
Improved road grip.
Safer all-weather performance.
Increased fuel economy.
No internal oxidisation through the elimination of moisture.
Increased tyre life.
Harder Longer erections.
Better Sex life.
Higher income.
http://www.firestone.co.nz/services/detail/nitrogen
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
OK, well that's one thing nitrogen (or any other gas) definitely doesn't offer, because of the ideal gas law.
Does moisture ever condense in tyres? I'm not sure. If it did, it would have the effect of raising the thermal expansion coefficient. It might also rust the steel belts (if any). Condensed moisture in your tyres could hardly be a good thing.
Firestone tried to sell me nitrogen recently when I put a couple of new tyres on the coon, $5 per tyre, thanks but I'll just stick to the free stuff from the servo thanks.
Hmm, thermodynamics are just as much the playing field of physicists and engineers mind you...
P*V = mass.Originally Posted by swbarnett
In a tyre you have to consider the mass constant. The volume is close to being constant. The effect of raising the temperature will mainly be an increase in pressure -> smaller contact patch -> less rolling resistance.
Of course there are numerous assumptions included in that equation as has been outlined in previous posts. For most intents and purposes it describes the behaviour of gasses rather well.
I'm thinking you hit the nail spot on there! Water expands about 1400 times when going from liquid to gas phase. However, the phase transition takes a fair amount of energy and may actually help to cool the tyre - for a while.
Another thing to bear in mind is that modern soft compound race slicks are quite porous and will leak air, and nitrogen for that matter, very quickly. You would always check your tyre pressure before hitting the track in any circumstance. Thus, the use of nitrogen to reduce leakage for performance tyres is a bit redundant.
Molar mass and volume specific mass density are not the same thing mind you. Besides for gasses (due to the above equation) density depends very much upon their pressure and temperature.
DO NOT GO THERE!
Phew, I think we dodged that one
There's likely to be some water in liquid phase in your tyre. Albeit, it will not be in a pool in the bottom of the tyre - just tiny droplets suspended in the air. When the temperature increases a fraction of this is going to undergo a phase transition to gas phase and expand those ~1400 times...
Don't worry about it![]()
It is preferential to refrain from the utilisation of grandiose verbiage in the circumstance that your intellectualisation can be expressed using comparatively simplistic lexicological entities. (...such as the word fuck.)
Remember your humanity, and forget the rest. - Joseph Rotblat
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks