Air hoses that shoot water into your tires
#11
From what I've seen with our older air compressor that puts out water, it can destroy anything that requires air to operate it. Shop has filters in place and drains the water traps every day, water still tends to come thru and has already ruined at least 1 air ratchet, 1 air gun and nearly took an air sander down. Water is very bad and yes, water in your tires is very bad.
#12
I blew a tire earlier this year that had some water in it when the guy changed it. I can't help but wonder if the heat build up in summer could have caused additional pressure with the water, much like boiling water. The steam built up pressure and blew the tire apart. It is just a theory.
I'm going to watch this from now on. I've been amazed (horrified) at how much water some of these air hoses shoot out.
#13
Rookie
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Huntsville,AL
Posts: 32
The way I solved this problem was to buy my own air line that glad-hands to the truck air. $20-$30. Before I bought this I was having to push the air chuck nipple in to express the water out, sometimes took a while, sometimes not. The reason I finally bought my own line was the problem of finding air at all. Now I got air on demand and its clean n dry.
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#14
The way I solved this problem was to buy my own air line that glad-hands to the truck air. $20-$30. Before I bought this I was having to push the air chuck nipple in to express the water out, sometimes took a while, sometimes not. The reason I finally bought my own line was the problem of finding air at all. Now I got air on demand and its clean n dry.
#15
lowrange your air governor might be set a bit too low. Or the system pressure is down almost to the point of kicking in the compressor to build it back up to 120. Try bleeding off some more air from the truck until the compressor kicks in. Then when the dryer spits it's at full pressure. Should be 120.
Air your tires in the morning before you start driving and before the sun shines on them. You shouldn't have to be told this! And 105 is too much air unless you run over 75 MPH steady or haul extremely overloaded where each tire bears more than 6,000 lbs. (that's 6,000 x 8 tires = 48,000 on a set of tandems!) 105 would be ok for steers on a setback front end. If you run rock-hard tires for better mpg, you are sacrificing safety. Check the tire mfrs. load/inflation tables for proper tire inflation pressures for the maximum load you carry.
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#16
lowrange your air governor might be set a bit too low. Or the system pressure is down almost to the point of kicking in the compressor to build it back up to 120. Try bleeding off some more air from the truck until the compressor kicks in. Then when the dryer spits it's at full pressure. Should be 120.
Air your tires in the morning before you start driving and before the sun shines on them. You shouldn't have to be told this! And 105 is too much air unless you run over 75 MPH steady or haul extremely overloaded where each tire bears more than 6,000 lbs. (that's 6,000 x 8 tires = 48,000 on a set of tandems!) 105 would be ok for steers on a setback front end. If you run rock-hard tires for better mpg, you are sacrificing safety. Check the tire mfrs. load/inflation tables for proper tire inflation pressures for the maximum load you carry. I just picked 105 for better fuel economy but haven't dared run the 110-115 I've heard others have. I don't know anything about it, really. |
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