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Tire Gauge Recommendation

expatriated

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I know this is sort of silly thing but does someone make a decent (read: precise) tire pressure gauge?

I've always used the cheap ones you get near the register but recently I noticed that my stem one, circular one and VW electronic model all register different psi, up to 5 psi difference. Maybe that isn't that much but my OCD really kicks in when I'm on a 2,000 mile motorcycle trip. The electronic one always registers the highest, the circular/dial one the lowest.

So, is there a good tire gauge out there?

Thanks!
 
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Tarheelgarage

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milton brand; you can get them at northern tool. $19 will get you a decent gage for the money.
 
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expatriated

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Good. Milton it is so far. Thanks!

Is one style inherently more accurate/inaccurate than others (pencil vs dial vs electronic)?

What do you motorcycle racers use?
 

t100

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I've seen a lot of Moroso and Longacre around the race track.
 

nate379

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I have a Blue Point digital one that worked nice. The batteries went dead a few years ago though. I guess keeping it out in teh truck with -40* temps will do that.
 

superautobacs

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I've been using a Intercomp 360064 since 2001 and I've dropped and had mine bang against hard surfaces over the years, but it still works... other than not knowing whether it's calibrated properly. Because of that, I only use mine; I never borrow someone elses.

I'd probably get a Longacre, liquid-filled version, if I do decide to replace mine. The needle registers instantly unlike my Intercomp where it takes a second more.
 
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Danglerb

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Longacre is a bit more than I would like to spend, but in searching I've found a fair number of issues with Milton, and one of my friends Bluepoint failed within a few weeks.

What has worked for me for a LONG time is a cheap gauge from a welding supply connected to a Milton chuck.
 

cglasgow

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I've got a BluePoint dial gauge that I bought in the early '90s. I recently discovered that it read about 10 psi high. Now I know why my tires always looked low and why the tire shops consistently overinflated my tires! ;-) I've got a bunch of those cheapy pencil gauges and took measurements with those, averaged them, then recalibrated the BP to that figure. It's been fine since, but for all I know it'd been wrong since day one.

The moral I guess is that no matter what you buy, don't assume it's correct just because you spent a bunch on it. Verify it against something else before you trust it.
 
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kevin-ct

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I've got a BluePoint dial gauge that I bought in the early '90s. I recently discovered that it read about 10 psi high. Now I know why my tires always looked low and why the tire shops consistently overinflated my tires! ;-) I've got a bunch of those cheapy pencil gauges and took measurements with those, averaged them, then recalibrated the BP to that figure. It's been fine since, but for all I know it'd been wrong since day one.

The moral I guess is that no matter what you buy, don't assume it's correct just because you spent a bunch on it. Verify it against something else before you trust it.

X2 :bowdown:
 

Danglerb

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If your really serious about tire pressure, I'd suggest getting one that measures air temp as well as pressure and compensates so you can fill or adjust pressure on a hot tire.
 

engineer2

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I have experience with higher end tire pressure gauges we make for NASCAR, Indy teams and the airlines. They are a bit bulky for motorcycle trips and pricey for most people. Thing I have learned, much of which is from our customers:

You get what you pay for. There is a lot of junk out there:
http://blog.tirerack.com/blog/tire-...ressure-pressure-gauge-vs-ambient-temperature

If you drop a mechanical gauge it will affect its calibration. All gauges eventually get dropped.

Mechanical gauges lose accuracy as their mechanical parts wear or get corroded.

If you drop a digital gauge and didn't break anything, its accuracy is not affected (no moving parts).

Liquid-filled gauges become very inaccurate as you get above or below normal ambient temperatures.

Most inexpensive digital gauges are more accurate than mechanical gauges.

Mechanical gauges are most accurate near the middle of their range. Digital gauges are most accurate in the upper part of their range. Consider this when selecting a pressure range.

You need to replace the rubber washer at the tire chuck when it gets old. It will eventually leak and affect your readings.

Check tires first thing in the morning or after they have cooled for at least 3 hours. Never let air out of a hot tire. Tire pressure will be too low when the tire cools. Do what you want on your own car though, this is an FAA rule.

Use the gauge within its rated pressure range. For example, putting a 60 psi gauge on a 150 psi compressed air line will usually ruin it. Pulling a vacuum on a gauge not meant for it may ruin it.

A "temperature compensated" digital gauge means that the pressure sensor has a built-in thermistor used to correct for temperature induced errors. This is seldom perfect (except in very expensive calibration gauges), but it greatly reduces a major source of error.

The inexpensive digital gauges should never be used for liquids. They use sensors designed for dry gases only.

If no accuracy specs are stated, be very afraid. Most accuracy specs only apply at normal ambient temperatures.

Racing and aircraft tires are usually measured with ±0.25% full scale accuracy gauges because that is what is recommended by tire manufacturers. These get a little pricey, but ±0.5% should be good enough for passenger cars.

No affiliation with Accutire nor have I ever used one, but reports on the web seem positive.

I found a few links where people have tested gauges:

http://townhall-talk.edmunds.com/direct/view/.ef017dc/0

http://www.animalnetwork.com/mcn/technical/200511gauges.pdf
 

PaulR

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When offroading I need something accurate all the way down to 3-4 psi. My milton gauge has been trustworthy for a good 10 years now. :)
 

engineer2

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If you use the Milton 60 psi dial gauge it is probably accurate to ±2% of full scale. They don't give an accuracy spec and it's scaled in 2 lb increments. This gauge should be accurate to ±1.2 psi. Real world is probably more like ±2 psi.

If you use the Milton 15 psi gauge it should be accurate to ±0.3 psi (probably 0.5 psi real world), much better for your 3 to 4 psi setting.

For passenger car tires ±1 or ±2 psi is probably fine. The NASCAR guys find half a psi affects handling, but their tires are only 1/8" thick.
 
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expatriated

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Once again, you guys come through with tools and info. Good stuff, Engineer.

I think I'll get a couple of these things and see which ones I like the best.

Thanks to all.
 
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