View attachment 653398
$12 Keychain deflator from my local shop.
Dead-nuts simple - I start at the front-left corner and thread one on, then work my way around the vehicle. By the time I've got all four tires hissing, I go back to the front tire and start checking it with a gauge. When that one is down to the correct pressure, I make another trip around the van and pull each one off after checking again with a gauge.
It takes very little time and it's too simple to fail or give me errors. The time-delay to remove the valve cap and thread on the next deflator gives me the time I need to move from tire to tire without having to worry about one tire getting deflated too far. I have never understood using any other method that requires more expensive or complicated equipment.
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Same, though what I've been using for couple years is the
TeraFlex; looks identical though yours was less expensive than this one is now. Prices have been going up on all sorts of gear.
I have the ARB Deflators and one from Boulder Tools that you can preset desired low pressure. What I've found, though, is that these are always close at hand, right on my keychain or console and that, like
@Herbie, I can start with one wheel, work my way around, and by the time I get back to the first wheel it is down about where I want.
The more I'm out wandering, the more I reach for the simplest, most efficient, tool, and that I am rarely in so much of a rush that I am concerned about a couple minutes time messing with air pressure. It's actually when I check my tread, lean my head into wheel wells to inspect, just generally do a check.
Even after a year of not going anywhere, I knew right where this was today and didn't have to unpack or open anything or dig for it.
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