the tire will bounce
Very much so if it blows out. ----------------------------------------- Yes. If there is a bubble in a tire, that means that the tire has what is called a separation. A separation happens when the tread on the tire peels away from the steel belts and fabric inside. Air then starts leaking into the space between the tread and steel, and creates a bulge in the tire, which is the bubble you can feel in the tire. A separation is extremely dangerous because a separated tire WILL blow out shortly after the bulge appears.
It can be a cause.
No. it doesn't hav enough pressure to bend the rim, but it can be a very dangerous situation. If the bubble is more or less just a bump in the tire it is probably caused by the tire seperating. The threads that bind the tire have ruptured, and air is getting in between the layers of material causing the bubble. it is an accident waiting to happen.
It dissipates in the atmosphere.
a) the straight graph
Because when you compress a gas like airit gets warm - which is what happens to the pump. And when a gas like air is allowed to expand, which is what happens when you let it out of the tire, it cools off - which is what happens to the valve.
most of the time if you get an air bubble you die
Using a pipette with air bubbles leads to errors.
It looses air therefore, you have a flat tire so you should go to a mechanic! The tire pressure slowly drops causing the tire to wear unevenly and you to have less stability and control of your vehicle.
It looses air therefore, you have a flat tire so you should go to a mechanic! The tire pressure slowly drops causing the tire to wear unevenly and you to have less stability and control of your vehicle.
Can you? Sure you can, but I would not recommend it. Air is leaking through the plies of the tire and bulging the sidewall. This has caused the sidewall to separate from the carcass of the tire. This will eventually leak to complete separation of the sidewall and tread as time goes on. My advice is to replace any tire with a bubble on the sidewall. This is a defective tire that you do not want to drive at highway speed on and risk an accident. I built tires at a General Tire plant so I have knowledge of how they are built and I would not drive on this tire.
When air is compressed into a tire, its density increases because the same amount of air molecules are now packed into a smaller volume. This increase in density helps maintain the tire's pressure and support the vehicle's weight.