• I'm back on my BS 🤪
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      2810 hours ago

      Road bicycles like the ones used in the Tour de France use pressures in the 120-140 psi range, but cars generally float around the 32 psi area.

      • Mr. Semi
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        87 hours ago

        100 psi is standard on semi truck tires.

        Steer tires specifically are sometimes 110 or even 120.

        • @_thebrain_@sh.itjust.works
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          46 hours ago

          In not really talking about possible, I am more talking real world running pressure.

          I’m sure you can air up a car tire but at 90 psi it would be so rock hard that travel on it would be extremely uncomfortable. Also you would risk blowing it out whenever you went over a big enough bump. The tire volume inside would deform and cause a massive pressure spike.

          Tractor trailer tires are made with more layers of rubber and steel belting so they can safely handle higher pressures.

          • @jcs@lemmy.world
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            122 minutes ago

            Right, you would likely pop a tire on your friendly neighborhood pothole. Even if you were lucky and avoided all of that, the tires will bulge in the center, drastically reducing the contact patch with the ground and you’d have probably 15-35% traction compared to proper inflation.

        • @errer@lemmy.world
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          -310 hours ago

          Yeah you can definitely do it with car tires for a short time at least, that’s how you check for leaks (overpressure to like 80 psi and put it in a tub of water, look for the bubbles)

          • Rhaedas
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            278 hours ago

            You do not need to overpressurize to find leaks. This is dangerous advice, as a tire blowing at even lower pressures can kill you. And there won’t be any warning before it does.

            • @errer@lemmy.world
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              14 hours ago

              Sorry buddy but you’re full of shit, this is standard practice at tire shops. The reason you overpressure is that a tire at rest may not lose air noticeably, you overpressure to mimic driving down the highway when the tire is bulging out more due to centrifugal forces.

              80 psi for a few minutes is not really that dangerous, the tires blow up at 120+ psi.