I use nitrogen in all my tires is denser than air and is not susceptable to change due to temperature change Costco in California puts it in all their tires and my local store tops up my tires whenever I need it I know initially the first few top ups will be the air that is left in the tire from not being able to completely evacuate all the original HD air from when the bike was new I have had it in my convertible since new in 2007 and check every 6 months and have only been a couple of pounds low pretty good over 6 months
I love how people fall for this BS about nitrogen and temperature changes. Rather than listen to me, go to any high school science teacher and have them explain the various gas laws, especially the part about temperature versus volume and pressure. Also, next time you're listening to those announcers on that racing program, pay attention to how they mention getting the tires up to temp to get the pressures up before leaning on it too hard. If nitrogen pressure wasn't affected by temps, why would the racers need to consider that when inflating those tires?
BTW, I use plain old 78% nitrogen mixed with various other stuff, versus the 98% max nitrogen they sell at the typical tire store, and I also don't have major air loss. It has a lot more to do with the tire, rim, and valve than it does the percentage of nitrogen in the tire.
I was reading a Mr. Goodwrench ad for a Chevy dealer in the paper this morning, and the absolutely ridiculous claims being made for nitrogen made me laugh louder than anything in the comic section. For only $39.95, this stuff will do everything but grow hair. And as a famous person once said, a sucker is born every minute.
Jerry
Oh, that pressure thing? Try changing the claim in the future to something more along the lines of "when using pure nitrogen, pressure changes due to temperature changes will be more predictable". That statement is correct, the other is not.