Tire pressure gauges
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- This topic has 13 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 10 months ago by
Vicegrip.
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June 16, 2016 at 6:19 pm #1053898
mstone
Participant@lordofthemark 141603 wrote:
But I am curious, are there pressure gauges that are designed for bike tire pressures (IE well above 50 psi)?
Yes. Truck tires also go 100+PSI, so it’s not a bike-specific requirement. In general, though, you should be very careful about using automotive tire pumps on high-pressure bike tires, because they go from 100 to pop pretty quickly.
June 16, 2016 at 6:29 pm #1053900Tania
ParticipantYou should be able to pick up a small digital one (Topeak, SKS, Schwalbe) at your LBS (or amazon etc) for not a lot of money.
I don’t usually pay attention to the gauge when inflating/topping off my commuter tires, I just do the squeeze test (like Charmin).
I do have a few handheld gauges for when accurate pressure matters (like my 27.5+ tubeless tires where there’s a BIG difference between 9 psi and 11 psi) and I’m pretty obsessive about it then (I even make notes on what I was running, conditions and how it fared).
June 16, 2016 at 6:58 pm #1053901lordofthemark
Participant@mstone 141605 wrote:
Yes. Truck tires also go 100+PSI, so it’s not a bike-specific requirement. In general, though, you should be very careful about using automotive tire pumps on high-pressure bike tires, because they go from 100 to pop pretty quickly.
See that’s exactly the problem. I can check the pressure till it is over 50, and then I get real nervous. So even when I have just pumped, I am probably running well under the max recommended tire pressure. Not the only reason I go so slowly, but one of the reasons.
June 16, 2016 at 7:06 pm #1053902huskerdont
ParticipantI’ve been thinking of getting the Schwalbe Airmax pro gauge, but then that’d be another thing to carry around that I’ve gotten by without for years. Still, for your situation, it might be $18 well spent.
June 16, 2016 at 9:51 pm #1053922mstone
Participant@lordofthemark 141608 wrote:
See that’s exactly the problem. I can check the pressure till it is over 50, and then I get real nervous. So even when I have just pumped, I am probably running well under the max recommended tire pressure. Not the only reason I go so slowly, but one of the reasons.
Well, in general the “max pressure” doesn’t have much to do with how much air to put in. I use http://www.dorkypantsr.us/bike-tire-pressure-calculator.html as a starting point for road bikes and only increase if there are snake bites or the tire is squirmy. The gauge helps to be consistent and figure out what works.
June 16, 2016 at 10:23 pm #1053925hozn
ParticipantIt’s probably true that if your max pressure is 70, then 50 is more than sufficient (or optimal).
That said, I use the Topeak digital gauge; it works great after modifying it to remove the spring; before that it would always drain 10psi just trying to it on.
I am have been carrying it with me on the commutes this week as am experimenting with different pressures on my gravel tires, trying to find that balance between on-road rolling speed and off-road handling.
June 16, 2016 at 11:34 pm #1053928Vicegrip
ParticipantI found that a ok grade bike floor pump with a good built in gauge to be well worth the investment. Testing the pressure on small volume tires can impact the pressure. Pumping up to and then stopping at or slightly above the desired pressure is easy and repeatable. I have a big high volume 2 stage multi cylinder compressor and built in air lines in the shop and still reach for the $35 floor pump for all the bike tires.
For best accuracy and repeatability you want to use a guage that has your desired pressures roughly in the middle of the scale. Guages tend to be less accurate at the top and bottom of the full range than in the middle.
June 16, 2016 at 11:39 pm #1053929KLizotte
Participant+1
June 17, 2016 at 1:08 am #1053934dkel
ParticipantI have a handheld bike tire gauge and one on my floor pump. They read significantly different pressures, to the tune of 5+ lbs. Because I always run pretty huge tires, I don’t really care. For most applications on regular clinchers that amount of difference doesn’t matter anyway.
June 17, 2016 at 2:35 am #1053939AFHokie
ParticipantI went with a Planet Bike Dial Tire Gauge and I’m happy with it. It doesn’t need batteries which more often than not, I find devices like this usually need the batteries replaced in the most inconvenient times.
June 17, 2016 at 11:41 am #1053943June 17, 2016 at 1:00 pm #1053945huskerdont
ParticipantHmmm, $200+ versus $18. For a gauge that’s going to work better than a floor-pump gauge, which has been good enough for several years. I know which side I’m going to come down on on that one.
June 17, 2016 at 5:34 pm #1053966Vicegrip
ParticipantFor those of you with compressors and the desire for a slight but not too expensive overkill.
Have used this one from time to time in harsher conditions than seen in a bike shop or home. Well made for the money and accurate to one tenth of a PSI with a 5 to 150 psi range. The end fitting has a gripper to hold it onto a standard schrader type tube or tire. This could be used to hold a presta adapter. this version has a 3 position inflation lever. Off, Fill and bleed. Slightly over fill and bleed back to target pressure. The battery is behind 2 small screws and the reviews make much of this. The guys in the shops don’t seem to have any issues with changing the battery in this unit and I see some that have years in shop automotive service.
I have a Joe Blow yellow floor pump and find it to be as accurate and consistent in its readings as needed for bikes. At 100 psi it was off by 2 pounds from my $$$ racing grade certified guadge. YMMV as i tested another one and it was off by 6 psi at 100.
The key is consistency in the range you use. A gauge that reads well at 120 for your 700X19 mm might be 30% off at 6 psi for the fat bike’s tires. This might or might not be better than the “Thumb method” which I have to admit that I still use from time to time.
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