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Does high air pressure throw off wheel balance?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Should we be closing questions more regularly?How much should I inflate my tire?Which tire pressure is right for my 2008 Toyota Yaris's front tires?Should I let air out of my tires?Tire Pressure Adjustments When NeededRadial tires: Do they bulge at too high pressure?Cold weather tire pressure adjustmentHow does tire pressure vary with altitude?Why does a tire have the same air pressure when mounted on the car and when not?What does tire size have to do with the capabilities of an air compressor?Tire pressure with tires on vs off the car










7















The tire shop balanced my tires at 41 psi, when my recommended psi is 30. I have since lowered it to specification, but would this throw off the balance?










share|improve this question




























    7















    The tire shop balanced my tires at 41 psi, when my recommended psi is 30. I have since lowered it to specification, but would this throw off the balance?










    share|improve this question


























      7












      7








      7








      The tire shop balanced my tires at 41 psi, when my recommended psi is 30. I have since lowered it to specification, but would this throw off the balance?










      share|improve this question
















      The tire shop balanced my tires at 41 psi, when my recommended psi is 30. I have since lowered it to specification, but would this throw off the balance?







      tires pressure air






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 2 days ago









      Peter Mortensen

      1654




      1654










      asked Apr 13 at 23:11









      nachosnachos

      635




      635




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          No. Balance is caused by even weight distributed around a tire.



          If there is more weight in one spot the tire will "wobble" when spun.



          Inflating a tire more may alter the diameter, but the weight of the tyre itself is still in the same relative place.






          share|improve this answer

























          • In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

            – Hagen von Eitzen
            Apr 14 at 3:36












          • @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

            – Solar Mike
            Apr 14 at 5:50


















          3














          It won't affect wheel balance, but high tyre pressures will give you a much harder ride, so any bumps & stones etc.. even smaller ones may well be felt through the steering wheel and come across as vibration. Lower the tyre pressures to the correct specs, if you still feel that there is a balance issue just have the shop re-check the balance for you.






          share|improve this answer

























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            2 Answers
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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            7














            No. Balance is caused by even weight distributed around a tire.



            If there is more weight in one spot the tire will "wobble" when spun.



            Inflating a tire more may alter the diameter, but the weight of the tyre itself is still in the same relative place.






            share|improve this answer

























            • In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

              – Hagen von Eitzen
              Apr 14 at 3:36












            • @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 14 at 5:50















            7














            No. Balance is caused by even weight distributed around a tire.



            If there is more weight in one spot the tire will "wobble" when spun.



            Inflating a tire more may alter the diameter, but the weight of the tyre itself is still in the same relative place.






            share|improve this answer

























            • In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

              – Hagen von Eitzen
              Apr 14 at 3:36












            • @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 14 at 5:50













            7












            7








            7







            No. Balance is caused by even weight distributed around a tire.



            If there is more weight in one spot the tire will "wobble" when spun.



            Inflating a tire more may alter the diameter, but the weight of the tyre itself is still in the same relative place.






            share|improve this answer















            No. Balance is caused by even weight distributed around a tire.



            If there is more weight in one spot the tire will "wobble" when spun.



            Inflating a tire more may alter the diameter, but the weight of the tyre itself is still in the same relative place.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Apr 14 at 7:24

























            answered Apr 13 at 23:22









            Sir Swears-a-lotSir Swears-a-lot

            1,322512




            1,322512












            • In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

              – Hagen von Eitzen
              Apr 14 at 3:36












            • @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 14 at 5:50

















            • In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

              – Hagen von Eitzen
              Apr 14 at 3:36












            • @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 14 at 5:50
















            In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

            – Hagen von Eitzen
            Apr 14 at 3:36






            In theory, it is possible though. Imagine a tire with a hole in the thrad such that inflating it will cause the inner tube to expand in a balloon-like shape there (this does therefore not apply to normal (tube-less) car tires and you won't want this to happen anyway for obvious reasons, but was an often used gag in old black-and-white movies), the symmetry of the weight is influenced by inflating.

            – Hagen von Eitzen
            Apr 14 at 3:36














            @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

            – Solar Mike
            Apr 14 at 5:50





            @HagenvonEitzen have you weighed a balloon? Even includig the balloon it is probably less than a wheel weight....

            – Solar Mike
            Apr 14 at 5:50











            3














            It won't affect wheel balance, but high tyre pressures will give you a much harder ride, so any bumps & stones etc.. even smaller ones may well be felt through the steering wheel and come across as vibration. Lower the tyre pressures to the correct specs, if you still feel that there is a balance issue just have the shop re-check the balance for you.






            share|improve this answer





























              3














              It won't affect wheel balance, but high tyre pressures will give you a much harder ride, so any bumps & stones etc.. even smaller ones may well be felt through the steering wheel and come across as vibration. Lower the tyre pressures to the correct specs, if you still feel that there is a balance issue just have the shop re-check the balance for you.






              share|improve this answer



























                3












                3








                3







                It won't affect wheel balance, but high tyre pressures will give you a much harder ride, so any bumps & stones etc.. even smaller ones may well be felt through the steering wheel and come across as vibration. Lower the tyre pressures to the correct specs, if you still feel that there is a balance issue just have the shop re-check the balance for you.






                share|improve this answer















                It won't affect wheel balance, but high tyre pressures will give you a much harder ride, so any bumps & stones etc.. even smaller ones may well be felt through the steering wheel and come across as vibration. Lower the tyre pressures to the correct specs, if you still feel that there is a balance issue just have the shop re-check the balance for you.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 2 days ago









                Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2

                112k19178375




                112k19178375










                answered Apr 14 at 1:12









                OrbOrb

                4,624510




                4,624510



























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