The air we breathe
The air
that's in your tires
A tire filled with "plain old
air"
can lose 1.5 psi in less than a month

With
nitrogen, it can take up to six months to lose
1.5psi.

Oxygen reacts and
damages inner tire liners and belt packages; nitrogen does
not.

Draining water
from your air lines every day helps, but unless you have a really
efficient air dryer, chances are there's a lot of water in your
compressed air.

The air around us
is full of water vapor. It's called "humidity".
Compressing air
concentrates
the water in it.

Small bits of corrosion from wheels can prevent valves from seating
properly, leading to loss
of air
pressure.

NASCAR and
IndyCar teams use nitrogen because it allows them to
more
accurately predict
tire pressure
fluctuation.
Graphics
provided by Bridgestone/Firestone.