Do you have a make or link for that please?We have a rechargeable battery operated one that reaches the required bar.
It's a Von Haus, purchased on Amazon. It also has a cable to connect the charger to a cigarette lighter connection as well as a mains connection. It has a digital display that can be set to psi or bar. We've had it about 2 years, I think it was about £30.Do you have a make or link for that please?
Thanks. I have a couple of Von Haus tools and they've proved to be good.It's a Von Haus, purchased on Amazon. It also has a cable to connect the charger to a cigarette lighter connection as well as a mains connection. It has a digital display that can be set to psi or bar. We've had it about 2 years, I think it was about £30.
I have a lighter socket adapter which has crocodile clips on the other end so use the caravan leisure battery for the side of the caravan I can't reach from the car.You might want to consider if you get tyre inflator, will you be able to get it to reach either of the tyres.
They're usually 12v powered from the car 12v socket but I can't get my car near enough when at home.
I have a 12v socket in the caravan but its still out of reach for the inflator to be able to connect to the tyres. Fortunately I have an old 12v car battery so I just lug that out and connect the inflator to it.
No idea - but my old pencil gauge gives reading consistent with my TPMS display.Seeing all these great gauges how do you know the level of accuracy! How are they calibrated?
Ask the manufacturers..........Seeing all these great gauges how do you know the level of accuracy! How are they calibrated?
With most cars I've had in the last 50 years, I've treated the car makers' inflation figures as starting points for my own experimentation and usually end up with a difference from their figure - most of those cars would show different handling and wear qualities with a 3 psi difference in cold pressure, ie +/- 1.5 psi - but I'm aware that some cars are insensitive to small differences in tyre pressure.Ask the manufacturers..........
Whilst absolute accuracy would be nice, in practice for normal road cars as long as they are within +/-1.5psi of the indicated value there isn't much a problem, as after a few minutes on the road most tyres will warm up by a few degrees which will naturally increase the pressure. What is more important is the consistency of the gauge, so they you can inflate each tyre consistently.
I dont know of any way in which the public can get a tyre pressure gauge calibrated, Commercially where pressure measurement may be critical there are laboratories that offer proper calibration against National Standards, but at a considerable cost.
It's ok if it's been calibrated!I suppose kicking the tyre is no longer compliant🤪