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#1
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Im positive nitrogen has this property. But I will say that we do keep the bladders that we fill is 99.9% pure, moisture free nitrogen. The bladder is the black rubber piece in the bottom right corner. ![]() ^^^ In this case the the "gas under pressure" is the nitrogen that is held in a rubber blader, to keep it from being contaiminated by any oil that may be present. As the shock heats up to over 300* that heat would drasticly change the propertys of how the shock worked, if the bladder was filled with comp. air. Filling it with nitrogen keeps the shock working consistantly from first using it and its cold, all the way up to OP temps. ![]() (I'm bad speller... sorry) Last edited by Jordo; 10-30-2010 at 01:32 PM. |
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#2
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Sorry you are not a physicist. Nitrogen is inert, that is critical in many sealed components- it decreases corrosion and breakdown. True. But it still expands with temperature. You cannot change that. As you point out, MOISTURE FREE is the key! You get that from a green bottle with a tag that says "99.99% certified moisture free technical grade" Like I said, so many people have been told "nitrogen doesnt expand" that even 'professionals' will believe this! I am sure you were told this, and now you hold that as a belief. The person that told you- yes, he believes it as well. Sorry to break that bubble, but nitrogen expands. |
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#3
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Originally Posted by Jordo I disagree. Nitrogen is used in suspension componits for the benifit, of its ability to not change in pressure from hot to cold. (well some change, but much less then norm. compressed air) I worked in a -performance only- suspension and motor shop for a few years building Motocross suspension. Im positive nitrogen has this property. But I will say that we do keep the bladders that we fill is 99.9% pure, moisture free nitrogen. The bladder is the black rubber piece in the bottom right corner. (I'm bad speller... sorry) |
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#4
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"There is no significant difference in expansion and contraction characteristics of nitrogen compared to air when moisture is absent. Expansion or contraction of either gas, in relation to temperature change, occurs to a similar extent over the commonly encountered pressure and temperature ranges relevant to the discussion of tire inflation. There is no practical difference as long as the gases are dry in a fixed volume container such as a tire." The difference is completely due to moisture content, not because it is Nitrogen. Nitrogen is inert, and that is why it is used in shocks, e.g., does not promote corrosion or degradation/oxidation of bladder or seals. |
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#5
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I've been using it for about 2 years in my stock 235/65/17s and think it contributes to a much firmer ride (I like that) and the pressure doesn't deviate as quickly. My local tire place offers 99.9% for free with new tire purchases.
__________________
---------------------------------------------- 2006 X5 3.0L - Schwarz Black/Truffle Brown Stock But I keep it clean
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#6
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Have a bottle? NO PROBLEM, that is 100% N2, that is dry gas.
(However there is nothing about nitrogen that makes it cooler... zero data for that) (Technically the N2 molecule is SMALLER than the O2 molecule.... Hmm, how can this be? everyone says otherwise... And remember, 78% of air is nitrogen...does this 78% leak out faster when it is just 'plain air'? ) Quote:
I commend you on using 'real' nitrogen...my issue is that consumers are being ripped off under pseudo-science. A PS The answer to my second comment above is this: there are tests that show the N2 molecule as minutely faster permeation times through latex rubber. (not tires) and this has been twisted by vendors in (1) stays inflated longer. (2) proper inflation increases gas mileage, (3) proper inflation is safer. Of course on the last two they leave off the "proper inflation" and say "nitrogen saves money and protects the kids"... |
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#7
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Yeah this whole N2 thing kills me. Soo many strawman arguments in favor, so many dubious claims. Oxidation of vulcanized rubber takes many years, many times longer than the typical lifespan of tire tread. Most modern compressors separate water from the compressed air, it's an easy to do and widely understood technique for paint guns, air tools, etc. Most wheels are alloys, most component parts that any moisture would come into contact with are not ferrous and so wouldn't rust anyway. If they did, heaven help your vehicle if it rained..
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In My Garage: 2011 X5 5.0i, Carbon Black/Black Nevada ZAV ZCW ZMP ZPP ZPS ZTP 322 4BP 456 5AC 6NF |
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#8
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It's a rip off since there is no second valve to extract the already existing air out of the tire.
My NT03's on my race car has an extra valve for extracting air, although I've never used Nitrogen...............
__________________
1994 E34 M5 Touring 2003 E46 M3 Race Car 2007 E60 M5 2010 E70 X5 35d
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#9
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Actually I thought of this- I suppose you could do repetitive fill/purges (3,4,5?) with a tank of N2 to get it closer to pure. Or just punch a hole in the tire to purge and plug it when done! |
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#10
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Hmmm, I went away for a day and missed all this. Just one comment to add to the good information above, noting that it is all about the moisture, not the fact that it is 78% nitrogen or 93% nitrogen.
That is the claim that nitrogen is inert, and reduces the oxidation of tires. This is true, but there is one fatal flaw in the argument. That is that tires have an inside and an outside. Let's say you stop all the oxidation on the inside. Great. Now what about all the oxidation on the outside? Are you driving in a nitrogen environment, or in air? Add in sun damage, and the outside of tires is the only issue with respect to aging of tires, the inside doesn't matter at all with respect to aging. Similar issue with respect to flamability. Nitrogen doesn't support combustion. How many fires start inside tires? As long as there is air on the outside of tires, you can have a fire (if you have fuel, and a source of ignition).
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2007 X3 3.0si, 6 MT, Premium, White Retired: 2008 535i, 6 MT, M Sport, Premium, Space Grey 2003 X5 3.0 Steptronic, Premium, Titanium Silver 2002 325xi 5 MT, Steel Grey 2004 Z4 3.0 Premium, Sport, SMG, Maldives Blue |
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