Tire Pressure on the dash question
#16
Pole Position
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Vancouver Island, BC -ex Illinois &Toronto, ON
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This same topic has been covered a number of times before.
If the HS is the same as the LS (and I suspect it is) then there is no fixed association between the tire location and the position in the dash display.
There may initially be a number of owners who have the same sequence but I suspect that is probably due to the factory loading the sensors in the same order (e.g.. spare first, etc.) when the cars are built.
Once you rotate your tires you will change the position in the dash display.
Yes, other manufacturers have different systems that identify the exact location; this is not an example of Lexus' best engineering
If the HS is the same as the LS (and I suspect it is) then there is no fixed association between the tire location and the position in the dash display.
There may initially be a number of owners who have the same sequence but I suspect that is probably due to the factory loading the sensors in the same order (e.g.. spare first, etc.) when the cars are built.
Once you rotate your tires you will change the position in the dash display.
Yes, other manufacturers have different systems that identify the exact location; this is not an example of Lexus' best engineering
#17
Driver School Candidate
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: GA
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If the person who wrote the manual is using the term "correlation" like a statistician would use it, then the order in which the values are displayed has no relationship to the position of the tires on the car. In other words, you can't predict which tire pressure belongs to which tire from the values on the multi-information display.
#18
I haven't checked whether the right to left tires can be identified correctly, but for sure the first two values (reading from left to right) are my rear wheels and the next two are my front wheels. I have changed pressure several times, allowing less air pressure in the front tires during heavy snow and then less air in the rear tires in fair weather - and the positions have stayed the same. It's a relatively easy thing to check if you have a air pump
#19
I haven't checked whether the right to left tires can be identified correctly, but for sure the first two values (reading from left to right) are my rear wheels and the next two are my front wheels. I have changed pressure several times, allowing less air pressure in the front tires during heavy snow and then less air in the rear tires in fair weather - and the positions have stayed the same. It's a relatively easy thing to check if you have a air pump
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