Can I use your product with my Automatic tyre Inflation system?
As long as your inflation system connects to a valve stem,
and the valve stem still has the original 1-1/4" valve
core inside, you won't have a problem. You will have to replace
the original valve core with the filtered valve core we supply.
Can I use your product with my tyre Pressure Monitoring System
(TPMS)?
Most TPMS sensors that thread onto the valve stem, such as
the Pressure Pro, will require a filtered valve core.
Note: If your wheels have a TPMS system that is an integral
part of the valve stem, Dyna Beads will not cause any problems,
but you won't be able to install the beads using the Applicator.
See examples here
Can I use your product with my Cats Eye Pressure Equalizing
system?
Absolutely! The factory verifies that the Cats Eye System
uses the original valve cores, but simply keeps them depressed
in normal use. So all you need to do is swap the original valve
cores with the filtered valve cores, and you're in business.
Should I use Dyna Beads in my new Super Singles?
Absolutely! We realize that these premium-quality tyres are
carefully balanced at the factory, and do not come with balancing
weights as a result. However, as the miles pile up, this situation
will change. tyres do not wear evenly, and as a result, even
this top quality tyre will require balancing. We offer a new
special EZ Open Bag size just for this tyre. Before your Michelin
dealer mounts those tyres on the alloy rims, have him install
our Super Single Pack for maximum long tyre life.
Available for Owner/Operators here, or in the Fleet Program.
Can I use Dyna Beads in my 5th Wheel with the Dexter Torflex
suspension?
Absolutely! The Dexter Torflex suspension is independent from
left to right within the same axle and also independent from
axle to axle since there is no equalizing system to provide
any transfer of load from axle to axle.
Why don't you have tyre charts for cars or SUV's?
We do not market to cars and SUV’s intentionally.
The main reason (among others) is due to the style of modern
car tyres.
For cars and SUV’s, traditional weight balancing is the
best method.
Can I use Dyna Beads in my motorcycle?
You bet, and you'll get a glass smooth ride! Whether you have
a Harley, Honda or a Tank scooter move up to the super-smooth,
weightless ride of Dyna Beads! See the Motorcycle Page here.
Can I use Dyna Beads for motorcycle road racing?
No. The inner liner compound of motorcycle road racing tyres
is too soft to allow Dyna Beads to perform properly. (this
does not apply to off-road motorcycle racing)
Do I need filtered valve cores for my motorcycle?
The purpose of the filtered valve core is to prevent a bead
from getting caught in the valve core mechanism. So if your
valve stems can accomodate the filtered valve cores, then by
all means go ahead and use them.
Filtered valve cores, however, do not fit a lot of motorcycle
valve stems. They require a seat 1-1/4" down in the stem.
If you cannot use them, simply rotate the tyre so the valve
stem is about the 6:00 position, then give the valve stem a
quick shot of air prior to checking pressure.
Can I use your product in my H1 Hummer?
If the answer to either of the questions below is yes, then
our answer is no.
Do you have the Central tyre Inflation System option installed?
Do you have Run Flat tyres installed?.
If you have the CTIS option, and you have a problem with it,
and the dealer finds any internal balancing media inside, this
automatically voids your warranty.
Will your beads damage my tyres or alloy wheels?
Never!
The material is totally inert and will not react with either.
Do I have to take my tyres off the vehicle to install
the beads?
No, but if you can, it will speed up
the process. The more straight-up-and-down you can position
the valve stem, the easier
this becomes. Whatever works for you, do it.
I have valve stems that have a 90° bend. How do
I install the beads through these?
Most customers have had no trouble doing this, and we even
have a picture of this process on a motorcycle on the Installation
page. Occasionally, a poor quality bend can reduce the size
of the hole and not allow beads to pass, but these cases are
in the minority. The best way to install is with a hand held
vibration tool. See the Installation Page for this here.
Can I use Dyna Beads with low profile tyres?
Click here
to read information sheet on low profile tyre maintenance
packs.
Can I use Dyna Beads in tyres with inner tubes?
Absolutely!
The inside of an inner tube is perfectly smooth, the ideal
surface for Dyna Beads. We strongly advise using
new inner tubes before installing Dyna Beads. This applies
to motorcycles as well. The reason is that old inner tubes
often have accumulations of compressor oil, which makes the
inside tacky or sticky, which will inhibit Dyna Beads from
working properly, or not at all.
Note: Some vehicles, like the Unimog, occasionally run inner
tubes in these large aggressive tyres. Some of these tubes
can add 15 - 20 lbs per tyre to the weight, so it's advisable
to let us know this when you inquire.
If I put in 2 oz, but the tyre only needs 1 oz., what happens
to the rest of the beads?
Only the beads required to counteract the imbalance will be
used, the rest will distribute themselves evenly around the
inside circumference of the tyre. This is the beauty of the
system. See the How It Works page.
What is a Maintenance Level application?
While our product is designed to be used without weights on
most vehicles, many some pickup customers with low-profile
tyres have found that the addition of 3 - 5 ounces in their
tyres and keeping the weights on has accomplished two goals:
The ride smooths out noticably, and most future rebalancing
requirements have been eliminated. This is also the solution
for customers having tyres with an existing lateral imbalance.
Click here
to read information sheet on low profile tyre maintenance packs.
If there's moisture in my tyres, will it stop the beads from
performing properly?
NO. You mean will it clump? Dyna Beads® are a perfectly
round, uniform surface, very heavy, and won't clump.
...and because they are 100% solid ceramic, they don't rust!
Why not use glass beads?
Our high-density
ceramic beads are 60% heavier than glass beads, so that means
it takes less by volume, which is more efficient,
especially in smaller tyres. The heavier the bead, the
more efficient they are. Glass beads will grind down relatively
quickly, our ceramic
Dyna Beads won't. As soon as the glass beads grind down,
they are susceptible to "clumping" due to moisture.
Shops report that dismounting tyres that contain this pulverized
glass is hazardous to their hands, to say nothing of breathing
it in. Dyna Beads are safe for you, your shop personnel,
and the Environment.
What about Mechanical Balancers?
Mechanical balancers are overly expensive for the simple task
they are required to do. Would you rather pay $10.00 for a
smooth ride, or $150.00?
Due to the large disc that mounts directly behind the wheel,
they reduce the flow of air across the front brakes , which
can be a problem with big rigs in hilly territory. (a.k.a.
- brake fade / rotor warpage)
Here's a quote from leadfreewheels.org
on mechanical balancers:
"
Drawbacks are that the balancers have a fixed amount of balance
medium and can only correct balance up to a limit of about
12 oz. of lead. Also, like external weights, the balancer
operates at a smaller radius than the tyre, making it progressively
less effective as the tyre diameter increases for a given
wheel
diameter."
Dyna Beads develop more counterbalance force
than mechanical balancers because they operate at the extreme
outside circumference
of the tyre. Dyna Beads have no weight limitations, and
our Ceramic media is 100% environmentally safe.
Dyna Beads
are more effective on Drive tyres.
The typical
mechanical balancer can counterbalance about the equivalent
of 12 oz of lead. The only way to use these
on drive
tyres is to bolt one between the drives. Now you have
two tyres bolted together trying to stay balanced with a maximum
per-tyre
counterbalance of only 6 oz. Not enough in some cases,
especially when the heavy side of two drives happens
to
come together.
Take a look at how we define efficiency
in balancing media.
Efficiency for balancing media is defined by four primary
factors:
Weight per unit of measure (g/cm)
The heavier it is, the less
product it takes by volume to do the job. You get too much
material in the tyre, and it can't
concentrate it's weight into a small enough area. Due to
centrifugal force, the extra mass of material ends up "flattening
out" over a large surface area, defeating it's efficiency.
Resistance to movement
Irregularly shaped media has to "slide" along the
inner tyre surface, and naturally, sliding creates a lot of
resistance to movement, in comparison to a perfectly round
object like Dyna Beads, that "rolls" into position
with almost no resistance to movement.
Size, shape, and surface texture
While this should be just one factor, all of these are related
when it comes to "clumping". Balancing powder is
composed of many, many small particles of irregularly-shaped
substances of rough, irregular surface texture. Clumping is
caused from moisture clinging to these particles and sticking
together due to surface tension. The more individual particles
you have (size), the more surfaces you have (shape), and the
rougher the surface (texture), creates a "target rich" environment
for surface tension, and clumping. Dyna Beads are very large
comparatively, absolutely round, and perfectly smooth. Moisture
and surface tension has virtually no effect on Dyna Beads.
Hardness
A balancing product that is nice and round with a smooth surface
can only perform properly if it stays that way over many thousands
of miles, especially important for Fleets. Other materials
are much softer than ceramic, and can grind down quickly, and
become prone to "clumping". Here's a comparison:
Mohs Hardness Scale
Ceramic (Dyna Beads) 7.0 - Hard
Glass 5.5 - Med
Stainless Steel 4.0 - Soft
Is there any situations where Dyna Beads are not recommended?
We do not recommend Dyna Beads in these situations:
...in Goodyear Fortera tyres.
...on any pickup, 3/4 or 1 ton, that has converted to 19.5
or 22.5 wheels and tyres. For the explanation, see this document.
...to correct wobble, shimmy or shake, all a function of lateral
imbalance or defective suspension components. See next question.
My vehicle has a [shimmy, shake, wobble]. Will your beads
fix this?
No. There are three terms commonly used to describe lateral
(back and forth) movement of the steering wheel, wobble, shimmy
and shake. Two of these are a result of lateral imbalance of
the tyre/wheel assembly.
Wobble - this is more a function of mechanical suspension
components than anything else, but can also be a result of
bent or damaged rims.
Mechanical Imbalance - This is lateral movement caused
from tyre or wheel non-uniformity or improper bead seating.
Corrected
by measuring the amount of tyre and wheel runout and replacing
the defective component.
Weight-related Imbalance - This
is lateral movement at normal driving speeds commonly characterized
as "shimmy" or "shake" resulting
from unequal weight on both sides of the tyre and wheel circumferential
centerline. The wider the tyre, the lower the aspect ratio,
the more likely this is to occur.
How can I tell if my tyre has a lateral imbalance problem
before installing the beads?
If you have weights installed now:
The most obvious indicator is a large amount of weight (comparatively)
on one side of the tyre, and a small, or no weight on the
opposite side.
If you are purchasing new tyres:
Have the tyres spun on a balancer. If the machine is telling
you that you need a lot of weight on one side and little weight
on the other, then the tyre has a lateral imbalance.
Can I put the tyre on a balancer to see if it's working?
No. Dyna Beads operates on physics principles, and requires
the tyre assembly to be in motion against a road surface to
detect the exact counterbalance position. An electronic balancer
has a solid, fixed mount, and does not allow the tyre to react
to imbalance.
When you come to a stop, do the beads fall to the bottom of
the tyre?
Yes. Due to a small static charge built up between the bead
and rubber interaction, a few will remain attached to the tyre
circumference, but only a very small amount. The rest fall
to the bottom and reposition themselves when the tyre starts
rolling again.
Will I hear the beads while driving?
No. In the driveway, however, you may hear them rolling around
if you move the tyre.
At what speed do the beads start to work?
The balancing principle is based on centrifigal force, and
enough force is developed to keep the beads in position at
approximately 25 - 35 MPH, but the exact speed is dependant
upon tyre diameter.
How easy is it to install?
Very. See the Installation page.
How much will I need?
See all the different Charts.
Do I have to remove my wheel weights ?
Motorcycles, scooters, Yes. Most other vehicles, no. Many
of our car and SUV customers have found that the addition of
2 - 3 ounces per tyre while retaining their wheel weights makes
the vehicle ride much smoother than before, and eliminates
most future balancing requirements. The typical application
for this is Mercedes, Porsche, BMW's, Corvettes, etc.
Is there any way I can speed up the Applicator process?
There's a couple of nifty suggestions, the most popular being
the vibration method to speed things along rather quickly.
See the Vibration Method (Motorcycles) on the Installation
page.
This really works terrific, the author uses this method
himself.
Can I use Dyna Beads in my airplane?
You bet! We've had many orders destined for aircraft, and
zero complaints.
Is there a disadvantage to using Dyna Beads and weights together?
Yes. You won't attain the same additional tyre mileage that
you will using Dyna Beads as the sole balancing method (any
vehicle). In motorcycles and scooters, this will be especially
noticable over time and may result in vibration or tyre cupping.
What kind of tyre life can I expect?
On average, about 20% - 30% more than under similar circumstances
using wheel weights. The primary reason for this is that while
most people only balance their tyres with conventional weights
only once, you are rebalancing your tyre and wheel every time
you drive.
For Motorcycles, our customers report a much higher tyre life,
some as much as 100%, but the norm appears to be 30% - 50%
more.
What if I have a flat?
It depends. If you have a flat and the tyre repair service
installs the newer patches that require the dealer to actually
grind the inside surface, you will most likely not have a problem,
as the patch is almost flush with the tyre surface when properly
applied.
An improperly mounted patch or if the excess glue has not been
wiped out from around the patch may impede the action of the
beads and cause a slight vibration. ( You will have to reinstall
new beads after the repair, however )
Will an internal tubeless tyre patch effect the beads?
Not if it's applied properly. It is - very- important any
excess glue that has oozed out from the patch be removed with
solvent or alcohol. Otherwise all the beads will get stuck
on them. I also advise a sprinkle of talcum powder over the
area just to make sure there's no sticky residue left. But
otherwise, no.
Can I reuse the beads in my next set of tyres?
Sure, all of our beads are reusable. For motorcycles/scooters,
it isn't worth the hassle.
Here's what wheel weights can do to your alloy wheels
Strictly for the Technical types, here's some info on why beads
are more effective than rim-mounted weights.
There's no place
to mount standard wheel weights other than on the
edge of the rim. Problem is, that is not where the weight is
most effective, for two reasons.
The weight is not centered across the sectional width of the tyre.
That's why some tyre Mechanics will split the weight into two smaller
weights and put one on the inside, one on the outside. The most
effective position is directly in the center of the tyre, and this
is where the beads always are located.
The other problem is centrifugal* force. Lets say, as an example,
your 16" tyre requires 3 oz's of weight, according to the
Spin Balancer. The spin balancer is calibrated to calculate the
amount of weight based on the placement of the weight at, in this
case, an 8" radius. Once again, this is not the most efficient
location for a counterbalance weight.
Continuing on with this example, the inside carcass surface (
next to the tread ) is about 4" farther away from the edge
of the rim, to give us a radius of 12". This inside carcass
surface is where the beads work, and the farther away from the
center they are, the more centrifugal force they develop. So we
can use this formula:
F1*R1 = F2*R2 to calculate the actual weight of beads needed.
(3)*(8) = (x)*(12)
24 = 12x
x = 24/12 or 2 oz.
So as we've shown, the beads are much more effective per oz than
wheel weights, another reason to purchase Dyna Beads®! Stick-on
weights are even worse, due to the fact that they have to be placed
on the inside flat surface of the wheel, which is even farther
away from the tread than the rim itself.
* OK, let's not get into a discussion on whether centrifigal force
actually exists, and the true force, centripetal.