I put my faith in a cheap digital Accutire gauge I got from Canadian Tire two decades ago. I guess I don't actually know how accurate it is, but it is extremely consistent
I find that mine is consistent as well and I think that is more important if you can only choose between exact or consistent!I put my faith in a cheap digital Accutire gauge I got from Canadian Tire two decades ago. I guess I don't actually know how accurate it is, but it is extremely consistent
Inconsistent is complete garbage as it's just guessing and needs to go in the garbage. With a consistent but inaccurate gauge, by comparing against others or known good, you can use it with a manul offset like bitzz mentioned.I find that mine is consistent as well and I think that is more important if you can only choose between exact or consistent!
That is what I use most of the time. Much faster.How about gauges attached to an air chuck. I keep promising myself I'll buy one but instead I add air check, add air check, release too much etc etc.
Yup, even if they're not accurate, they're handy to get in the ballpark. My inflator has a built-in readout so I just over-inflate by 1 or 2 psi and then use the bleed valve on the Motion Pro to bring it down to the pressure I want. A quick press on the bleed valve button can drop the pressure by as little as .1 PSI per squirt, so accidentally releasing too much air isn't a problem.How about gauges attached to an air chuck. I keep promising myself I'll buy one but instead I add air check, add air check, release too much etc etc.
One you recommend?That is what I use most of the time. Much faster.
Meh. I have a PA one that I had to replace the gauge on as it had gone way off and a milton similar to this. They are ok but not great. If I get another one it will be digital. It will probably be dead every time I want to use it though as most cheap digital things have high phantom draw and I'm not spending hundreds on one.One you recommend?
I put my faith in a cheap digital Accutire gauge I got from Canadian Tire two decades ago. I guess I don't actually know how accurate it is, but it is extremely consistent
They all suck.
I bought some good ones over the years and they sucked.
So now I use a crap one!
If I set all 4 tires on a car to "32 psi", the same gauge will still read "32" on all tires a week later (at the same time of day, same temperature, etc).Wait, wut..?
How can one determine consistency if it's not accurate...?
If it's "wrong" all the time... I mean... How..? Wait.... Like...
If I set all 4 tires on a car to "32 psi", the same gauge will still read "32" on all tires a week later (at the same time of day, same temperature, etc).
I can't prove "32 psi" = 32 psi though
But why? I have a low-loss connector on a shock pump as volumes are very low and pressures high. On a tire (especially with an analog gauge), the amount I lose is insignificant.For the OCD set these valves are a fun toy. Put into a manifold for a zero loss when disconnecting or in multiples on a line for equalizing pressures.
schrader 556
Like i said for the OCD set. They are however invaluable for small volume chambers like air forks or nitrogen charging shocks. A pair of them on line with a common filler makes it quicker to balance pressure left right of front back on a four wheeler as well.But why? I have a low-loss connector on a shock pump as volumes are very low and pressures high. On a tire (especially with an analog gauge), the amount I lose is insignificant.
If the loss when you disconnect matters to you, you better install a few gauges on the connection and send them out for calibration regularly.