No. Plus are you going to re-fill it with nitrogen when its a bit low?
engineeringtalk.com said:Most importantly, by using it to reduce the concentration of oxygen in a tyre it possible to equalise the partial pressure between the air inside each tyre and the surrounding atmosphere.
As a result, the common problem of slow deflation caused by oxygen slowly leaking through the tyre wall is virtually eliminated, thereby ensuring that tyres remain at their correct pressures between vehicle servicing.
How? It seems to me that both air (about 70% nitrogen, 30ish % oxygen) and pure nitrogen would behave as ideal gasses in this respect and would thusly behave identically for equal molar quantities.It prevents the tyre pressure fluctuation (per the tyre's hot and cold cycles).
How? It seems to me that both air (about 70% nitrogen, 30ish % oxygen) and pure nitrogen would behave as ideal gasses in this respect and would thusly behave identically for equal molar quantities.
What do race teams use?
racing cars
/edit - So... Nitrogen has bigger molecules than Air/Oxygen, and therefore is more difficult for it to gradually escape from the tyre...
How? It seems to me that both air (about 70% nitrogen, 30ish % oxygen) and pure nitrogen would behave as ideal gasses in this respect and would thusly behave identically for equal molar quantities.
Surely it's heavier and will slow you down?
Oxygen is a larger atom by ever-so-slight an amount. The common molecules for each is N2 and O2 respectively. How does N2 end up being larger?