Ahhhhh.....pressure sensors
Sorry, but if you can't tell the difference between a flat tyre and a fully inflated one, you deserve to be stranded in a strange place
Did you have Nitrogen in the tyres?![]()
Yeah, but it's only flat at the bottom.
Ahhhhh.....pressure sensors
Sorry, but if you can't tell the difference between a flat tyre and a fully inflated one, you deserve to be stranded in a strange place
Did you have Nitrogen in the tyres?![]()
That should work as long as the broken valve stem is sealed as well.
Air goes down the valve stem, through the valve and then through the monitor into the tyre space. I'm thinking if the stem snaps off, the TPS monitor will still see the pressure around it, but the wheel will need a new valve. Putting the monitor back inside the rim with velcro might still work unless the valve stem itself works as a radio aerial.
Its just an idea. Ive never tried it.
Bit old this one to bring back but I'm wondering if its been tried yet (normal valve and tpsm stuck on inside of rim). Mines just broken and been quoted £200+ at my local dealer to sort it out. Some place on flea bay in Canada and Spain are selling original (probably not) ones for £36. Obviously would need coding in (wonder if GS 911 can do this, have seen a screen pic showing RDC panel)
Have seen some pics of the large part of the sensor without the valve part so I guess the valve pushes through the sensor, through the wheel and a nut holds it all in place. if thats the case the I wonder if its the large black bit that senses the pressure as well as transmitting it. If that was the case a car valve, like say of a Focus with TPSM, would do the job as its job is to put air in and hold all in place. Any thoughts?
Some place on flea bay in Canada and Spain are selling original (probably not) ones for £36. Obviously would need coding in (wonder if GS 911 can do this, have seen a screen pic showing RDC panel)
Any thoughts?
I bought one of those Spanish EBay sensors, looks genuine enough. Not had the tyre off yet to fit and try it out so I can't confirm either way.
If you are thinking of fixing a TPS with a broken stem onto the rim, do bear in mind the centrifugal force trying to throw it away from the wheel will be very strong at speed, it follows square law, double the speed quadruples the force. Velcro might not be enough.
We are talking about the little valves that allow air into your tyres here,and not an engine rebuild,are we?

Got an update for this thread. I've managed a temporary repair in terms of cost, not time. My brother in law is quite inventive and came up with a solution. We removed the wheel, popped the tyre off its bead on one side and with use of thick cardboard and a quality tyre lever levered the tyre back over the sensor. Then placed some wooden blocks between rim and tyre to allow the sensor to be removed. We then countersunk the sensor from the bottom,drilled the broken stem in stages, inserted a mountain bike presta valve through the entire assembly covered with a flexible sealant then refitted it. Did take some pictures but can't post as not a subscriber. Only downside is I have to use a track pump to put air in the tyre. Total cost of around a fiver and a couple of hours.
The inserted valve has a cone shape to it which is why the sensor was countersunk, this would seal on its own and the sealant was belts n braces. Mountain bikes run over 60 psi these days so I have no worries about its capabilities. When I get a job up here (just moved) I will replace it properly. When I finished this I noticed my rear esa is leaking! Not sure what repair to do on this one!
Yes, we are talking about what BMW do best!!.

It's another unnecessary complicated gadget to go wrong and cost loads to fix. How the feck did we manage for years without one on the bike? is it really that difficult to check pressures with an ordinary gauge? It's like these fancy electronic suspension systems they fit these days, gadgets and gimmicks for the bone idle and victims of marketing hype![]()
Its a secondhand bike and fitted to it already so didn't really have a choice.
Windychuffer, I did put a normal valve in it to move it around. I didn't leave it in because I don't really want to ride around with a warning triangle flashing at me constantly, annoying and I might miss another warning. Bmw dealer told me it would be an hour to an hour and a half labour to switch off the tpsm sensor...if they could do it. Can't see how it takes an hour or more to press a few buttons on a computer but hey ho, it might run windows!
Had a bad experience with Firefox racing, they were uksuspension then. When cash flows forth I think I'll try MCT.