You're not. Although I did not know which mfgr mine was until you mentioned SKS.How am I the first to say "SKS gauge?
You're not. Although I did not know which mfgr mine was until you mentioned SKS.How am I the first to say "SKS gauge?
2psi is a big difference, at least for me and my tires. I make .5 and 1psi adjustments for terrain.By feel/hands. I'm usually accurate to within 2 psi of what I think I want them at when I do actually check.
My wife on the other hand is always right on. We never use a gauge, we both typically over inflate with floor pump, let air out until they feel right, and go.
A snubber's useless in this case. It protects against transient surges, but not against sustained overpressuer.I agree with @atrokz and @Lelandjt . Changes of 1psi make a difference, so if you're not setting your pressure precisely everytime you ride, you're leaving margin for improvement. Squeezing your tire to check pressure can't be more precise than ±5psi, in which case I've found is the difference between a sliced tire/rim smash combo and "hmm, that hit was a little bit of a thing. Oh well, this next corner is coming up fast!"
That brings me to my next point: bike tire pump gauges have traditionally been terrible. In an attempt to make a pump compatible with any bicycle related machine ever made, the gauges typically read up to 160 - 200+ psi, which makes it useless for a mountain bike, as pressure gauge accuracy is questionable in the top and bottom 20% of the range. Additionally, when the minimum marked gradients are 10psi, it's hard to make 1psi changes.
I replaced the gauge on my pump with one from McMaster that reads up to 60psi, with 1psi gradients. After some goons borrowed it and broke the gauge trying to seat tubeless tires, it now has a 100psi gauge and a pressure snubber to idiot-proof it. The 100 psi gauge isn't as good, and I may go back to a 60 and just be a dick about how it gets used.
There's a few floor pumps that come with 50-60psi gauges for this reason now; Blackburn, Lyzene and Specialized all come to mind.I agree with @atrokz and @Lelandjt . Changes of 1psi make a difference, so if you're not setting your pressure precisely everytime you ride, you're leaving margin for improvement. Squeezing your tire to check pressure can't be more precise than ±5psi, in which case I've found is the difference between a sliced tire/rim smash combo and "hmm, that hit was a little bit of a thing. Oh well, this next corner is coming up fast!"
That brings me to my next point: bike tire pump gauges have traditionally been terrible. In an attempt to make a pump compatible with any bicycle related machine ever made, the gauges typically read up to 160 - 200+ psi, which makes it useless for a mountain bike, as pressure gauge accuracy is questionable in the top and bottom 20% of the range. Additionally, when the minimum marked gradients are 10psi, it's hard to make 1psi changes.
I replaced the gauge on my pump with one from McMaster that reads up to 60psi, with 1psi gradients. After some goons borrowed it and broke the gauge trying to seat tubeless tires, it now has a 100psi gauge and a pressure snubber to idiot-proof it. The 100 psi gauge isn't as good, and I may go back to a 60 and just be a dick about how it gets used.
I can't tell the difference....I'm an old hack, not a young buck pro2psi is a big difference, at least for me and my tires. I make .5 and 1psi adjustments for terrain.
I disagree, when I check my wife's tires with a 0-30psi guage I have, and she's almost dead nut everytime she fills them up, not +- 5 psi.....She's far more accurate than I am, and she's far more picky than I am.I agree with @atrokz and @Lelandjt . Changes of 1psi make a difference, so if you're not setting your pressure precisely everytime you ride, you're leaving margin for improvement. Squeezing your tire to check pressure can't be more precise than ±5psi, in which case I've found is the difference between a sliced tire/rim smash combo and "hmm, that hit was a little bit of a thing. Oh well, this next corner is coming up fast!"
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Statistical outlierI disagree, when I check my wife's tires with a 0-30psi guage I have, and she's almost dead nut everytime she fills them up, not +- 5 psi.....She's far more accurate than I am, and she's far more picky than I am.
I didn't articulate the situation very well. You are correct that a snubber only works for transient surges.A snubber's useless in this case. It protects against transient surges, but not against sustained overpressuer.
Finally that's starting to happen. It means I may be able to inflate tires like a normal person instead carrying around my nerd pump.There's a few floor pumps that come with 50-60psi gauges for this reason now; Blackburn, Lyzene and Specialized all come to mind.
So does that mean that when my SKS says I have 25psi it's actually 27psi? Was this test done using one example of each gauge or did multiple SKSs all read about 2psi lower than actual?German Bike magazine tested the following gauges:
SKS Airchecker: constant 0.15 bar below reference pressure
Schwalbe Airmax Pro: constant 0.12 bar below reference pressure
Topeak Smart Gauge D2: constant 0.2 bar below reference pressure
DRC G101: constant 0.1 bar below reference pressure
So in summary, it doesn't matter which gauge you use, if you use the same you reliably get the same pressure in your tires. If you want to set a certain reference pressure then you end up with too low pressure with all gauges.
I'm pretty sure the former one. German Bike magazine is well known for having half decent ideas about tests but fail pretty hard on the (proper) execution.So does that mean that when my SKS says I have 25psi it's actually 27psi? Was this test done using one example of each gauge or did multiple SKSs all read about 2psi lower than actual?
You are probably right, but she can put her tires at 17 and 20 psi on her DH bike consistently.Statistical outlier
Precision > accuracy for setting tire pressure. Just make sure to use the same gauge all of the time and you're good, as long as it is consistent.So does that mean that when my SKS says I have 25psi it's actually 27psi? Was this test done using one example of each gauge or did multiple SKSs all read about 2psi lower than actual?
Yep. They didn't describe the test procedure but I guess they used the same gauge multiple times to see how reliable it was.So does that mean that when my SKS says I have 25psi it's actually 27psi? Was this test done using one example of each gauge or did multiple SKSs all read about 2psi lower than actual?
Hmmm...I wonder if you were using an older one? 'Cause the one I have couldn't be easier with presta valves.I hate the SKS thingy, it just sucks with Presta valves. The 30PSI gauge that Sandwich got from Jenson is IMHO much nicer and more reliable to use. Unfortunately, it is big and heavy for a camelback pocket.
This fcuker? Maybe I have just a bad item but it gives me obviously wrong readings with too low pressure (confirmed by the beep) so I have to measure multiple times and lose air in the process.Hmmm...I wonder if you were using an older one? 'Cause the one I have couldn't be easier with presta valves.
lots of school busses in your townI sprint into a cinderblock wall and see how far I bounce back. 6 feet is usually a good 30psi.
For the back I jump in front of a bus on a highway with a 55mph speed limit. Looking for about 54 feet there...good for about 35psi.
If I'm off just reinflate, repeat procedure.
lots of school busses in your town
Hmmm... that's the one. Works fine. Perhaps operator error?This fcuker? Maybe I have just a bad item but it gives me obviously wrong readings with too low pressure (confirmed by the beep) so I have to measure multiple times and lose air in the process.
Perhaps he needs to Czech the fucking manual?Hmmm... that's the one. Works fine. Perhaps operator error?
It's in GermanPerhaps he needs to Czech the fucking manual?
For what it's worth I have access to 4 SKS guages: mine, my girlfriend's, the shop's in the repair area, and the shop's in the rental setup area. They all agree.I'm pretty sure the former one. German Bike magazine is well known for having half decent ideas about tests but fail pretty hard on the (proper) execution.
For what it's worth I have access to 4 SKS guages: mine, my girlfriend's, the shop's in the repair area, and the shop's in the rental setup area. They all agree.
No shit?I get an mri of my colon contents right before every ride so I can accurately assess any needed changes to suspension and tire pressure.
that reminds me.. i swallowed my data logging stuff last night.. time to ride and logI get an mri of my colon contents right before every ride so I can accurately assess any needed changes to suspension and tire pressure.