Anybody use nitrogen their tyres?

...for track or otherwise?
If so, got any pointers on initial pressure to try e.g. 110% of usual cold air pressure?
If so, got any pointers on initial pressure to try e.g. 110% of usual cold air pressure?
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Mister_T wrote:...for track or otherwise?
If so, got any pointers on initial pressure to try e.g. 110% of usual cold air pressure?
Tack wrote:I've used nitrogen in race tyres. The main reason is that nitrogen increases the tyre pressures at half the rate of compressor air. That is, if while out riding, your compressor air filled tyres rose by 12 psi due to ambient/road temperatures, load, riding, grip level then your nitrogen filled tyres would increase by 6 psi in the same road, bike, load, temperatures, conditions and riding. (Comparing identical conditions).
However, the biggest problem is moisture.
Moisture can occur in both air and nitrogen filled tyres and is the thing that creates the greatest pressure variation.
The issue with compressed air is that atmospheric air has varying percentages of moisture in it (humidity) which when compressed in a compressor for use in inflating your tyre creates a water trap that gets pumped into your tyre.
To test this, just start up your compressor and point the nozzle onto the concrete and watch the water mist out.
The higher the atmospheric humidity the more moisture is created in your compressor and forced into your tyre.
Good tyre shops have extremely good dry air systems to filter out the moisture. Bad tyre shops don't know and don't care and don't drain their tanks much at all.
However, using nitrogen isn't exactly perfect either. Moisture still gets trapped in the tyre and this causes pressure rises.
Just to demonstrate the issue with moisture problem with race tyres we would fill a tyre with nitrogen and then use a vacuum machine (modified and adapted from a hospital medical cabinet vacuum machine) to suck out all the nitrogen. We would then refill with clean new nitrogen. Vacuum again. Refill, vacuum etc. Each time we would use a hydrometer to measure percentage moisture content in the tyre. Once we had the lowest possible moisture reading, the tyre would be bled down to desired starting pressure.
The thing is even after doing all this, when the tyre was measured after the session the pressure would have still increased depending on track ambient/track temps and grip levels and believe it or not, the moisture content increased dramatically.
To this day I have no idea how or why the moisture increased. I have no idea how it manufactured water in a nearly perfectly dry atmosphere!
I'm not a a scientist and I have asked scientists to explain it however their suggestion was to experiment under lab conditions to find the cause.
The point is: if you are so concerned with pressure rises on your road bike then your best approach is to know very well how much you pressures rise under various ambient/ road temperatures, loads, grip levels and riding characteristics and adjust start pressures to suit.