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Old Oct 20, 2023 | 12:17 PM
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onehundred80
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Joined: Apr 2006
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From: Ontario
Default Re: Tires always need air put in them

Originally Posted by drluccia
A couple of months ago had new tires installed. TPMS light came on after driving a bit, parking, then starting off again. This pattern continued.
Two days ago, checked the tire pressure and discovered the driver side rear was almost completely deflated. Filled it up, the TPMS light was off, life was good.
Yesterday morning, the light came on shortly after heading out. Checked the driver side rear tire and it was 7 pounds down. Reinflated, drove off, TPMS light went off.
This morning, no light at all.
So ... it seems the TPMS system is working ... drops in pressure trigger the light. But ... how did the tire go almost completely flat overnight? How did it lose 7 pounds the next night? And how is it just fine today after driving, stopping, driving off again ... the kind of thing that's triggered the light before?
I will be taking the car to Big O, the tire shop that installed the tire, and have them check the valve stems, sensors, everything.
I've been dreading having to replace the TPMS system, even looking into aftermarket add-on systems that provide individual tire pressures.
In any case, the TPMS system is 17 years old and if I can just replace old parts with new parts, that is best. Or, perhaps there is just a leak in the driver side rear tire and that's a whole other bit of automotive joy. I kinda hope it is the tire, it's still almost brand new and under warrantee.
In some odd cases it depends on what position the wheel is parked, one position opens the area leaking and another position closes the leaking area. Whatever it is it needs fixing ASAP.
 
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