all within 10%
I gotta say, and I am just putting this out there... It is possible to find even wear, have compression within 10% of each other (from the average?) and be on the low side of "good." I know that there are some differences in the average reading from one gage to another due to calibration drift, and some differences due to initial ambient air density from sea level to a mile high. It is possible to have say, 115 psi average +/- 5% from highest to lowest, and not have the hp that it should. With the same gage and another bike, I have 150 psi avg and you definately can feel it on the high end.
I gotta say, and I am just putting this out there... It is possible to find even wear, have compression within 10% of each other (from the average?) and be on the low side of "good." I know that there are some differences in the average reading from one gage to another due to calibration drift, and some differences due to initial ambient air density from sea level to a mile high. It is possible to have say, 115 psi average +/- 5% from highest to lowest, and not have the hp that it should. With the same gage and another bike, I have 150 psi avg and you definately can feel it on the high end.
Originally posted by DiverRay
Check ALL FOUR and keep in mind anything over 10% in difference IS a problem.
Check ALL FOUR and keep in mind anything over 10% in difference IS a problem.
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