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Anyone built a TPMS pipebomb?

Discussion in 'Wheels & Tires' started by Shadow3, Aug 30, 2011.

  1. Jul 28, 2018 at 7:58 PM
    #41
    boatswain

    boatswain Well-Known Member

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    That's what I'm wondering, I'm thinking that it would just show the left rear being low instead of the left front when they are rotated and not recalibrated?????
    Will look up what it says about rotating tires, I'm mainly interested in doing it only it to run 2 sets of tires and rims, one set for summer and one set for winter, and not have the dash warning icon come on with the rims and tires that don't have the TPMS sensors in them.
     
  2. Aug 18, 2018 at 6:49 AM
    #42
    Tnronin

    Tnronin Two things in this world smell like fish!

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    This really should be stickied. My 06 was bought by me w/o tpms in the aftermarket rims. I've got some used Toyota sensors coming and I'll have the local shop program the new sensors and bomb this. Illnget m the parts for the bomb today while the sensors are on route. I was keen to disable, but don't want to dig into the dash.
     
  3. Apr 17, 2019 at 7:37 AM
    #43
    tenebs

    tenebs Well-Known Member

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    I'm going this route because the rigid metal TPMS sensors are prone to being sheered off if you hit a rock (picture) while off-roading. Rubber valves or even better Colby permanent valves are better, lower profile, and easily field replaceable without having to unbead the tire. Also on the 2018 Tacoma only 4 tires can be registered to the computer and you can't do that yourself unless you have one of the more expensive programming tools. So your spare even if on the same rim and rotated rim would always be without a sensor. Resetting the TPMS button when you rotate tires is not about tracking tire position as the indicator doesn't tell you position. It is about resetting the baseline air pressure so for instance you set the rear different from the front. You could also reset them when you air down for a trail then reset when you fill the tires back up.
    When you make a pipe bomb you have to put working and registered sensors in the pipe. Also the batteries are supposed to work for ~ 10 years and they are not user replaceable so then you just have to buy new sensors if you have the vehicle.

     
  4. Jan 6, 2021 at 10:20 PM
    #44
    Ketch

    Ketch New Member

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    Bumpers, Tires, working on a few specials
    A couple notes on Pipe Bombs. I Like them. I have a set of Road wheels that are in use for part of the year. Then I have a set of Wheels that are winter tires or Off Road. I tried having seperate sensors but even then if you air down I'm right back to that silly alarm. Now I have pipe bomb for the non road/ winter set and pressure changes don't set off the alarm. Easy peasy
    With that set up it is just a case of take off the city tires/wheels, add the pipe bomb and rough housing wheels. Then do a relearn on the ECU to set the new sensors.

    This is basically true. However modern sensors typically do not transmit all the time. They have a motion sensor and once activated they transmit when an internal motion sensor says they are moving. They go back to a low power mode when stationary. If you take your good wheels off and store them on the rack they will go to sleep until you put them back on. The same goes for the other sensors that are in the pipe bomb. You won't get 100% return on the time your not moving but it still dramatically increases battery life.
     
    FRE1809 likes this.
  5. Mar 6, 2021 at 11:23 AM
    #45
    zw470

    zw470 Well-Known Member

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    [​IMG]
     
    TireFire likes this.
  6. Mar 21, 2021 at 9:42 AM
    #46
    williams63

    williams63 Well-Known Member

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    Going to try this today. I have two sets of wheels. Just need to figure out what size hole to drill. Any reason you can’t use one of the censors itself to fill with air instead of buying the valve?
     
  7. Mar 22, 2021 at 9:53 AM
    #47
    williams63

    williams63 Well-Known Member

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    Well that was a lot easier than I thought. If I did it again or if anyone is going to do this cut the 3” pipe shorter than I did (like zw470). Fits under the seat right in front of the jack.

    B71A1FD0-3DC6-4877-BDC5-CB20C48DDE9A.jpg
     
  8. Mar 22, 2021 at 9:59 AM
    #48
    Evenflow

    Evenflow Well-Known Member

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    Yes
    Why go through all of this trouble when there is a simple one wire bypass method ?
     
  9. Mar 22, 2021 at 10:01 AM
    #49
    williams63

    williams63 Well-Known Member

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    I don’t think it could get any more simple. Only took about 10 minutes
     
  10. Mar 23, 2021 at 2:49 PM
    #50
    Knute

    Knute Well-Known Member

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    Interesting work around. Although, you lose the function of the TPMS system.

    Wouldn't a path to keep the function and allow a 2nd set of wheels be more desirable?

    Get a set of clone sensors. Perform the cloning procedure. Install the clones in the 2nd set of wheels.

    Now, you should be able to run either set of wheels while keeping the function of the TPMS.
     
  11. Mar 23, 2021 at 2:53 PM
    #51
    TireFire

    TireFire Superunknown Member

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    Can’t use rubber stems with the monitors is one reason. I hacked my wiring but perhaps making this contraption easier than the cloning procedure? Speaking of the latter, care to explain what that entails?
     
  12. Mar 23, 2021 at 4:28 PM
    #52
    williams63

    williams63 Well-Known Member

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    When I first changed my wheels I wanted to run 2 sets but was told by many here on Tacoma World that won’t work. That was 7 or 8 years ago.
     
  13. Nov 26, 2021 at 7:50 PM
    #53
    -MEH-

    -MEH- Makes people wish they knew floridaman instead

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    Wrong. These report 24/7. My light goes off every time I pull into my spot infront of my garage. And then comes back on with a service message after driving with no reading for about 20miles.

    I still have my stock set and they've been sitting on a stack next to some tires for my 944 for about 3.5 months now without being moved.

    Edit: misread that as you talking about OEM ones and not aftermarket that the other guy talked about. However I'm leaving this up incase people make that same mistake.

    The Denso made OEM ones are constant and cheaper than a bunch of the ones sold by tire shops.

    So if you are going pipebomb and don't have your originals. Buy the Denso's and have them programmed and then latter put them into the pipe.
     
    Last edited: Nov 26, 2021
  14. Nov 26, 2021 at 7:58 PM
    #54
    -MEH-

    -MEH- Makes people wish they knew floridaman instead

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    It's fine. He gave the feds $200 and wrote his name on it so they won't shoot his dog.
     
  15. Nov 26, 2021 at 8:22 PM
    #55
    whatstcp

    whatstcp currently drunk so don't listen to me

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    Saw a guy the other day that wanted to get rid of the tpms light without building a pipe bomb so he let the air out of the spare, popped the bead, shoved the tpms sensors in there, and aired it back up and got rid of the light. Don't know how long they'll last rattling around in there but just some food for thought for an alternative
     
    helix66 and zacinnc78 like this.
  16. Jan 11, 2024 at 11:52 AM
    #56
    TacoTuesday1

    TacoTuesday1 Well-Known Member

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    not running 5th wheel until swingout later

    made one of these but may have messed up and let too much air out of it. Passed a leak test submerged in water.

    what is everyone using to inflate them?
    I tried an HFT bicycle pump but it’s finicky and $15 for a big ugly pump

    rather have a cheap little soccer ball pump or something if that even attaches…

    found out unfortunately the self serve pump at Costco doesn’t work for this. I assume it’s too sensitive, small a volume, and machine not able to detect resistance of air like it would in a big tire

    I tried to set it cold 29psi but might have dropped the thing below that so will have to try it again. Didn’t know the truck was that sensitive. I’m guessing it’s currently at 28psi and tripping the warning even though door cold spec is 29…
     

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