Helium - let your pontoon carry you to the water. :-)
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Helium - let your pontoon carry you to the water. :-)
I have topped off mine by mouth a few times. The pump does not go with me on the water or up a trail, so if the sun goes away and the temp drops thirty degrees... More often with the float tubes I have owned than the toon, however. I don't pack in a pump to a mountain lake, and the tube is a lot easier to carry rolled up and strapped in or on the pack.
And as for passing out, I did that once in Montana, and a buddy of mine came real close a month or two ago up on the Mesa filling my backup tube after his broke...
As for the pressure change for altitude, remember that the firmness of the bladder is a function of the OVERpressure inside the tube, the difference between the pressure INSIDE the bladder and OUTSIDE. The amount of air inside doesn't change as you go up (it being trapped by that plastic wall), but the amount outside pushing against the inside does. Air pressure at 10K feet is about 65% of that at sea level, so less to keep the inside air from pushing its way out...
When we were kids, wifey and i filled our waterbed (yeah, one had to have a waterbed back then) with air...talk about a lot of fun trying to even get on it....it looked like a giant overstuffed pillow and it was about 4 ft high in the
middle...we laffed for half an hour trying to lay down on it. It would just throw us off on the floor at any attempt. Shoulda used nitrous maybe.
MontanaMoose
Hi,
I live at 363 above sea level ( so says my trusty g.p.s. ) and I can drive to and fish the other side of a summit that tops out at just a hair over 8,000 feet in an hour and some change.
Typically mid afternoon temps at my home this time of year will range from the mid nineties to the low triple digits, while at altitude mid day temps at this time of year might be in the sixties to eighties. Morning lows here might be in the low sixties while morning lows at the upper altitudes could be hoovering around freezing.
So to some degree, both temperature and altitude effect the transportation and use of our tubes. It's not uncommon for our tubes to be used on more than one lake, at different altitudes, in the course of a single day.
Having said all that, no, I don't see adding one more thing to my list of fishing needs. Inflation and pressure adjustments have always been simple enough, I really don't see adding one more thing to the mix.
As for inflation by breath, I still do it on a fairly regular basis during the warmer months. While I have a Super Fat Cat and find a hand pump to be more than sufficient for inflating it, that float tubes primary use is for drive to, or short walk in, fishing destinations.
Amongst my tubes, I've retained two older styled Buck's Bullet's with twist closure valves. Those tubes are easily inflated by mouth and are my primary tubes for packing in ( miles ) or Mt. Biking in. The primary bladder on the Bullet takes less than three minutes to get fully inflated ( hard ) and the back rest takes less than a minute. As mentioned earlier, the users physical condition, willingness & effort level, their ability to inflate at altitude by mouth, etc are limiting factors.
Best, Dave
Plain old air is approx 8o% nitrogen. I dont see what benifit you'd get by increasing that to 100%. Lot of added cost if you ask me.
By the way, I've filled my toon once by mouth. Thought I'd packed my pump, but couldn't find it once I got to the lake (hour plus drive) figured I was there so I might as well fish. Once I was done fishing and loading the car, I found the pump hiding under the seat. Didn't take as long as I thought it would (not counting the time that I was passed out from all of the huffung and puffing:p)
Kevin
I think this whole N2 instead of air started with racing teams and cars so I checked and found out the following. I thought it might have been humidity all along.
Nitrogen Instead of Air
Most of the teams remove the air from the tires and replace it with nitrogen. Compressed nitrogen contains less moisture than compressed air. When the tire heats up, moisture in the tire vaporizes and expands, causing the pressure inside the tire to increase. Even small changes in tire pressure can noticeably affect the handling of the car. By using nitrogen instead of air, the teams have more control over how much the pressure will increase when the tires heat up.
I conclude if you float tube at somewhere between 125 - 200 mph then nitrogen would be a good idea.
Nitrogen is a great thing in tires. The tires can last longer because there is no (or a lot less) oxygen in them to effect the compounds they are made of.
It's not just for racing, it has proven to actually increase the life of your tires.
Many tire shops now have nitrogen generators to fill the tires they sell.
I had 6 new tires put on our RV last spring at a Costco store near home. I ordered the tires online to be delivered to my nearby store and then they were doing the tires I noticed the Nitrogen set-up and asked the shop manager about it. I wanted Nitrogen in my new tires. He said they put nitrogen in all the tires they mount for free. Makes the tires actually run cooler on the road.
I think it is true, myself. When we went out to the river, I was checking the tires at a gas stop and surprised they were cooler than I ever remember them being before. And cooler than the boat trailers tires, which I always run at maximum rated pressure. But the RV tires use to be the same temperature as the boat tires. (I slap my tires to make sure they all sound ripe, and feel the hubs for bearing heat.)
But for your tube or Pontoon? Nope. I sure wouldn't do that. No gain I can see in filling your inflatable with nitrogen.
Tires Yes. Tubes No. ;)
Incidentally, when you see green valve stem caps... yep, filled with nitrogen.
Here's more....
I have yet to have a tire wear out from oxidation coming from INSIDE the tire. I HAVE seen oxidation on the outside on tires. Putting nitrogen on the inside will slow things down in there, but doesn't do anything for the other side. I for one drive enough that the tires don't really have time to age themselves to death, but for cars that do not get driven much, that is a very real safety hazard. Think boat trailers, too.
Pay attention when you buy tires, and if your tires have been on there very long. Manufacturers and the safety people recommend no more than 6 years old if the tire is in use (mounted and inflated -- even the spare), and no more than ten years from date of manufacture for ANY tire.
Every tire has a Department of Transportation (DOT) number following the letters on the sidewall. The last four digits determine the week and year the tire was made; for example, the digits 2204 would signify that the tire was made during the 22nd week of 2004. The last set of tires I bought was about two months old when they went on the truck. A guy I work with has tires on an old Willys jeep he drives to work that were manufactured in 1980.
I agree, the inside of my tires (even the ones that left me stranded before) have looked like new.
In reading that link "Here's More", I found out that nitrogen molecules are much fatter than "air" (who knows what is in air?).
So their migration through the tire is slower. Pressure loss, causing the sidewalls to flex more, causes excessive heat and stress cracks in the tires sidewall.
I do know for sure my tires run cooler than any of the previous sets did. And they have a six year warranty.
Funny about that 6 year running time, and a 6 year warranty. If they last that long, and I expect they will, I'll be happy.
But I wouldn't use nitrogen in my float tube. Nope, nope, nope. Too much hassle. :(
Ghostbusters.
From the view point of a guy who rode bikes more miles last year than he drove. In my thorny little corner of the world, green valve stem caps often mean " You've Been Slimed ".
See: http://www.rei.com/search?query=slim...34&button.y=10
Best, Dave