Tire Pressure Gauge Reading at 44.2°C

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The discussion revolves around calculating the tire gauge pressure when the temperature increases from -16°C to 44.2°C. The initial gauge pressure is set at 42.5 lb/in², with atmospheric pressure at 14.7 lb/in², leading to a total pressure of 57.2 lb/in². The temperature ratio in Kelvin is calculated as 257 K to 317.2 K, which is approximately 0.81. The correct approach involves dividing the total pressure by this ratio, resulting in a final gauge pressure of about 55.9 psi, indicating that pressure decreases with increased temperature. The confusion stems from the misunderstanding of gauge pressure versus total pressure.
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Homework Statement



A car tire gauge is used to fill a tire to a gauge pressure of 42.5 lb/in2 on a cold morning when the temperature is -16 C. Atmospheric pressure is 14.7 lb/in2 and 0 C = 273 K.

What would the tire gauge read when the tire has been heated up to 44.2 C?

Homework Equations



P2 = P1 (atmospheric pressure) + ϱgh (gauge pressure)
PV= nRT
P1/T1 = P2/T2

The Attempt at a Solution



P2 = (14.7 lb/in2 + 42.5 lb/in2) = 57.2 lb/in2

I don't really know if this is even the right first step. I just recognized that gauge pressure is ϱgh. What should I do next?
 
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Well, what is the ratio of the temps in Kelvin?
 
The ratio of T1/T2 = (257 K)/(317.2 K) = 0.8102143758
 
PrideofPhilly said:
The ratio of T1/T2 = (257 K)/(317.2 K) = 0.8102143758

So what would you do with that? Multiply or divide into the 57.2?
 
I'm assuming multiply:

So, 57.2 psi X 0.8102143758 = 46.3 psi BUT THIS IS NOT THE RIGHT ANSWER!
 
PrideofPhilly said:
I'm assuming multiply:

So, 57.2 psi X 0.8102143758 = 46.3 psi BUT THIS IS NOT THE RIGHT ANSWER!

Why would you assume the pressure would get smaller if the temperature increased?
 
If you divide:

57.2 psi/0.81 = 70.6 psi ALSO NOT THE RIGHT ANSWER!

The right answer is 55.8986 psi, so the pressure does get smaller.
 
PrideofPhilly said:
If you divide:

57.2 psi/0.81 = 70.6 psi ALSO NOT THE RIGHT ANSWER!

The right answer is 55.8986 psi, so the pressure does get smaller.

But 70.6 is not gauge pressure is it?
 
Oh...I got it. Thank you!
 
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