Above Forum Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
1 of 2 < >

Email Notifications Failing (mostly Telstra)

Hello everyone. Seems there is an issue with Telstra (possible others) blocking email from our server. If you are trying to sign up I would suggest a different email if possible. If you're trying to reset your password and it fails please use the Contact Us page:
2 of 2 < >

Welcome to the new look VWWatercooled

After much work and little sleep there is a new version of the forums running on more powerful and recent hardware as well as an upgraded software platform.

Things are mostly the same, but some things are a little different. We will be learning together, so please post questions (and answers if you've worked things out) in the help thread.

The new forum software is an upgraded version of what came before, it's mostly the same but also a little different. Hopefully easier to use and more stable than before. We are learning together here, so please be patient. If you have questions, please post them here. If you have worked something out and can provide an answer,
See more
See less

N27 - Nitrogen vs Compressed Air in Tyres

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Originally posted by brad View Post
    I worked at QF Engineering for 17 year. Hands-on in the components area & then planning for sheet metal, undercarriage, machine shop, interiors, evacuation systems, prop shop & other stuff, so I was never directly involved in the wheel shop.

    From observation:
    Widebody rims are in 2 halves with an o-ring seal. The o-ring gets a light coating of oil/lube but everything else is wiped clean with alcohol.
    The tire is dropped on the rim-half, o-ring fitted & the other rim-half fitted & bolted/torqued. Tire assembly is placed in a cage, then they simply try & inflate the tire. If it won't seat with normal pressure then i think they used talc to lubricate the bead.

    They did have some type of purging process but I never looked very closely (usually walking to the canteen). They used to let them sit for a few days as well & would periodically check the pressure.

    Sorry i can't be more helpful but it wasn't my area. Ask me about bench testing an RR RB211 Variable Inlet Guide Vane controller & I can make a bit more sense (not much though).
    Good one Brad ... thanks for the post. Yep, of course ... no need to use water or water/detergent when there's either rubber lube or talc.
    RB 211's? BIG!
    sigpic2011 T5 132kw 7spdDSG 4motion, '89 Citroen 2CV, 2006 Subaru Forester SG 5spd

    Comment

    Working...
    X