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-   -   Tire Pressure Monitors Hate Cold Weather! (https://xoutpost.com/bmw-sav-forums/x5-e70-forum/56601-tire-pressure-monitors-hate-cold-weather.html)

bigx5er 01-14-2009 07:54 PM

Tire Pressure Monitors Hate Cold Weather!
 
It has been brutally cold here in Minnesota the last few days. I had my 2008 X5 parked outside during the day when it was around -10. Started it and it told be that all four tires were low.

Previously it was reporting random tires being low. Looks like once it gets below zero, all bets are off. I did fill the tires a month ago and realize they lose pressure as the temps fall. But I do get a kick out of the TPM system, one of these days I'll really have a flat and I won't check it!

My Acura MDX never did any of this.

Thunder22 01-14-2009 08:55 PM

mine does the same thing, happened about a month ago, filled 'em up, they've been fine since.

stefandragnea 01-14-2009 09:03 PM

fill them up with nitrogen, it adapts better then simple air to the temperature variations, I have an 09 x5 and i`ve filled it`s wheels with nitrogen;)

E61Silver 01-14-2009 09:29 PM

How about helium?

rh71 01-14-2009 10:00 PM

they won't fix the backup camera, they're not gonna give you exact numbers for each wheel. ;)

JCL 01-14-2009 10:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stefandragnea
fill them up with nitrogen, it adapts better then simple air to the temperature variations, I have an 09 x5 and i`ve filled it`s wheels with nitrogen;)

Sorry, but it doesn't. Air is mostly nitrogen.

Nitrogen expands and contracts just like air does with temperature variations.

JCL 01-14-2009 10:35 PM

My monitors have been good down to about -30, it hasn't been colder than that yet.

It is most likely your tire pressures that are changing, not the monitoring system. Just check your tires every month with a gauge, and you will quickly find out how much they are changing due to both time and temperature variations. An alternate subject line might have been "My TPMS saved me from driving with low tire pressures"

bigx5er 01-15-2009 12:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JCL
My monitors have been good down to about -30, it hasn't been colder than that yet.

It is most likely your tire pressures that are changing, not the monitoring system. Just check your tires every month with a gauge, and you will quickly find out how much they are changing due to both time and temperature variations. An alternate subject line might have been "My TPMS saved me from driving with low tire pressures"

I wish it was that simple. My right rear goes off whenever it is cold and windy, I need to get that checked by my dealer.

I checked the tires tonight. The right rear actually had the most pressure, all were down around 3-4 psi, that makes sense with the temperature drop since I last filled them. But -- they were all within 1 psi.

I do not believe that 3-4 psi on run flats should trigger the thing. Once again, my Acura MDX did not trigger in the same conditions. It only went off when a tire was really low. My old E53 took around 8-10 psi to go off and that made sense.

I don't need the TPM to tell me it's cold outside, and no, I don't plan on checking the pressure each day when it's that cold outside. I do check them monthly.

First car this has happened on for me (and I've owned 26 cars so far).

HaroldC 01-15-2009 12:24 AM

The TPM does not measure absolute pressure. It is only capable of measuring relative pressure; ie. if your tire has lost a significant amount of air. BMW learned the hard way to stay away from absolute tire pressure devices when they used it initially in the 2002 e65 7 series. They have since changed all of their TPM to use relative pressure measurement.

FYI - for every change in 10 degrees, there is a change in 1psi in your tires. I imagine most of you that have had their TPM alert them of low air pressure have not checked their tire pressure since the summer or fall. Think about what the temp was when you last checked the air pressure.

The TPM is very useful and quite accurate. The threshold of when the TPM alerts you is dependent on how the software is written. Most of the time, the error lies with the user, not the component.

soldmystang 01-15-2009 06:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rh71
they won't fix the backup camera, they're not gonna give you exact numbers for each wheel. ;)


you really need to let it go rh. you're gonna give yourself an ulcer. :cool:


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