kljunior:</font><font color="blue" class="small">( <font color="purple"> Race cars use nitrogen in the tires because it does not change pressure as much with temperature fluxuations. We are talking about a 1/4 or 1/2 pound making a big difference in a race cars handling. It means nothing to the average street driven car or truck. </font>)</font>
GATC35: </font><font color="blue" class="small">( <font color="brown"> I use nitrogen in commercial airliners everyday. The reason you use nitrogen vs compressed air is because the nitrogen has no moisture. </font> )</font>
In a nutshell, those are the chief reasons for using dry N2 gas to inflate tires. We use it in our racecar to keep TPs consistent, regardless of tire/track temps. All gases expand as they are heated. When tires are filled with dry N2, the expansion is consistent on all four. With air-filled tires, the amount of water vapor in each tire is unknown, inconsistent, and uncontrolled. So, the rate of gas/water vapor expansion (i.e., tire pressure rise) can be radically different in one tire leading to reduced traction and bad track performance (or worse /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif)