False TPMS Alert

Author
Discussion

stevieturbo

17,269 posts

248 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
quotequote all
TGCOTF-dewey said:
You obviously have no idea what you're talking about.

In pretty much every bit of guidance you will find on the design of safety critical systems, frequent false alarms is considered a big no no for very obvious reasons. They actually make the system less safe.
Nope, you're the one being an idiot if you think no alert at all for a runflat tyre when it is deflated is a good or safe idea. In fact, idiot is being overly kind

stevieturbo

17,269 posts

248 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
quotequote all
TGCOTF-dewey said:
Mine goes off EVERY long journey. Every time I've checked the tyre pressure, it's within the manufacturers tolerance.

That's a false alarm.
China car ? China tyres ? China gauge ? Or maybe it's just the user....

TGCOTF-dewey

5,187 posts

56 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
TGCOTF-dewey said:
You obviously have no idea what you're talking about.

In pretty much every bit of guidance you will find on the design of safety critical systems, frequent false alarms is considered a big no no for very obvious reasons. They actually make the system less safe.
Nope, you're the one being an idiot if you think no alert at all for a runflat tyre when it is deflated is a good or safe idea. In fact, idiot is being overly kind
Been drinking chap? Doubling down on the insults is not a good look.

If you were to re-read my posts, you'd see that not ONCE did I actually state that. EVERY post has been about TPMS false alarms.





stevieturbo

17,269 posts

248 months

Friday 16th June 2023
quotequote all
TGCOTF-dewey said:
Been drinking chap? Doubling down on the insults is not a good look.

If you were to re-read my posts, you'd see that not ONCE did I actually state that. EVERY post has been about TPMS false alarms.
I've read...have you ?


TGCOTF-dewey said:
The Honda systems are utterly awful. They're a well known issue. Mine goes off on EVERY long drive.

They're more dangerous than not having one.
A false alarm is not dangerous in any way whatsoever. Annoying perhaps, but not dangerous.

One of us has maybe been drinking, and it certainly isn't me.

TGCOTF-dewey

5,187 posts

56 months

Friday 16th June 2023
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
TGCOTF-dewey said:
Been drinking chap? Doubling down on the insults is not a good look.

If you were to re-read my posts, you'd see that not ONCE did I actually state that. EVERY post has been about TPMS false alarms.
I've read...have you ?


TGCOTF-dewey said:
The Honda systems are utterly awful. They're a well known issue. Mine goes off on EVERY long drive.

They're more dangerous than not having one.
A false alarm is not dangerous in any way whatsoever. Annoying perhaps, but not dangerous.

One of us has maybe been drinking, and it certainly isn't me.
Not dangerous you say.

Say you stop on the hard shoulder of a motorway (exactly where speed based TPMS tend to false alarm) because you think you have a puncture... Is that dangerous?

Or what happens if you stop on a twisty unsighted road shortly after a blind bend... Is that dangerous?

Given folks will follow a sat nav down a bridle way and into rivers, those same folks are likely to quickly pull over and stop if they think they have a puncture.




ro250

2,752 posts

58 months

Friday 16th June 2023
quotequote all
Who'd have thought a TPMS thread would kick off?

Pica-Pica

13,820 posts

85 months

Friday 16th June 2023
quotequote all
ro250 said:
Who'd have thought a TPMS thread would kick off?
Yes, dispiriting isn’t it? Starting to put me off PH.

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

544 posts

30 months

Friday 16th June 2023
quotequote all
I agree it can be dangerous and that is why I made this thread.

All I do now is check me pressures regularly, make a note of them, and before any motorway or long journey check the tyres with a digital gauge then ignore the light if it goes off.

Seem to get less false alerts when the weather is warmer. But even when I do get them it's always always on long journeys

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

544 posts

30 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Seems as though I was not calibrating it properly.
The correct procedure is to pump the tyres up to the desired pressure, hit the TPMS button, then go for proper drive ( ideally 50mph for 15mins ) and that should sort it.

What I was previously doing, was hitting the TPMS button then driving 10 mins down the road and therefore was not calibrating properly.

IF anything was off with the ABS sensors, then there would be error lights and the TPMS light would come on at random times, not just when on a longer journey down the motorway.

Seems alright now but will keep an eye on it.




E-bmw

9,236 posts

153 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
As usual the key is:

If all else fails read the instructions. wink

Zarco

17,886 posts

210 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
We've all done it hehe

E-bmw

9,236 posts

153 months

Wednesday 14th February
quotequote all
Zarco said:
We've all done it hehe
How do you think I learnt that phrase? wink