Nitrogen
It's volume changes less than air as the tires temperature changes.
Nitrogen
Nitrogen, because it is an inert gas.
Nitrogen
nitrogeon is used to inflate race car tyres due to the consistent tyre pressure throughout different tempertures.
Nitrogen would be the word you are looking for. its because the expand and the heat ratio of the nitrogen is lower then air. very good question
this is a good question. it all depends on the type of cars are running on the track. in formula 1 racing, if it starts to rain the cars will go into the pits and either put on intermediate tires or wet tires, depending on the dampness of the track. in NASCAR racing, they will pull the cars into the pits and they will take trucks with jet engines attached in the bed and have them blow the track dry. if it is a public track, they dont do anything
Yes you can put studded tires on most all cars
Yeah, I wouldn't put racing slicks on it if your gonna drive it in a yard, only if it will be on asphalt and it is gonna cost you alot more for racing slicks then regular go kart tires that you can buy at your local tractor supply.
gas
In standard cars is it simply compressed air. The same mixture we breathe.
well there are gas pumps they put in the cars and gas buckets gas.
Not any more. "Stagger" is a technique used to make race cars with bias ply tires more stable. You put either bigger tires or higher tire pressure on the right side. Sprint cars and other series where they're not trying to "make everyone equal" use bigger tires; because NASCAR has always mounted the tires for you they put more air in the rights. This has naturally led to some of the more vicious wrecks in the history of the sport - if you are running five pounds of stagger and accidentally put a right-side tire on your left front, you go straight into the wall at full racing speed. They don't use stagger with radial tires because it doesn't do anything for you.