When you put air in your tyres and then remove the hose , there is a decrease in pressure as the connection is removed from the valve .
Is the best solution to set the machine at say, 1 bar above what it should be , in order to compensate for the decrease in pressure , when the hose is removed ?
What andy describes is what i was referring to - i thought the hissing sound that you hear when the hose connection is removed from the valve was air escaping from the tyre .
TWR - no you won't. I have tyre pressure monitors and can see the pressures increase whatever type of driving I do. The heat is generated by the tyre walls flexing, so you could argue the increase would be greater on rough country/city roads.
TWR,
I beg to differ as I tested it once. I drove to my local garage, 1 mile way, used their machine to put the correct pressure in and checked with a digital pressure gauge. Then drove 12 miles to next garage and rechecked, all tyre pressures had increased by a couple of pounds.
Funnilly enough i was watching an old episode of 5th Gear last night and Tiff Needell was doing a piece on air versus nitrogen in the inflation of tyres .
In his subjective opinion he could not tell any difference between the feedback coming from the tyres filled with either .
F1 uses nitrogen to inflate tyres .
Apparently because the molecules in air is smaller than in nitrogen , they can escape through the rubber of the tyres - whereas the molecules in nitrogen being bigger don't escape through the rubber ; thus enabling the tyre to stay inflated at the set pressure
Air is approx 80% nitrogen, 20% oxygen. Oxygen molecules are bigger than nitrogen molecules. Whenever you check your tyre pressures you can only add air yourself. I don't see any point in putting nitrogen in tyres.
That small hiss of air represents very little in terms of tyre pressure. Sometimes I have to reset the pressure if I've not disconnected the inflation nozzle swiftly which has caused a second or so of air to be released.