Tyre pressure monitoring with non-runflats

David-H

Senior member
Prees, Shropshire
What do those of you who replace the OEM wheels and RFTs do about the monitoring system if you fit new rims with non-runflat tyres?

a) Replace the valves in the non runflat wheels with a set of valves with RDC sensors (£316.49 for a set from Sopers),
b) Take the valves out of the OEM wheels,
c) Just ignore the tyre pressure warning?
 
:thumbsup: I never fitted them to my winter setup & it brought the light up on the dash. They were only fitted for 5months but if I was keeping them on all the time I would fit the sensors
 
Something to consider if you are going to be going non RFT permenatly and expect to keep the car long term i.e. Longer than 3 years then you will need to fit the sensors as the warning light on the dash would be a MOT fail.
 
KERMIT1970 said:
techathy said:
£315?... Try £160 - 271823877898

If you can get them for £160 i would buy them,keeps the dash clear. :thumbsup: techathy did you fit them to your car ? Going to look into that myself for my winters.
Yeah, I bought a set of 4 from that seller, they work perfectly. Just install on the wheels, fit to the car & do a pressure reset. :thumbsup:
 
techathy said:
KERMIT1970 said:
techathy said:
£315?... Try £160 - 271823877898

If you can get them for £160 i would buy them,keeps the dash clear. :thumbsup: techathy did you fit them to your car ? Going to look into that myself for my winters.
Yeah, I bought a set of 4 from that seller, they work perfectly. Just install on the wheels, fit to the car & do a pressure reset. :thumbsup:
Bit the bullet and ordered a set - total €218 ~ £176 delivered. Hopefully, when they arrive I can just drive to my local tyre fitting place, tell them to replace the standard valves with these new ones, do a reset and then drive home whilst it recalibrates?
 
DLH said:
techathy said:
KERMIT1970 said:
If you can get them for £160 i would buy them,keeps the dash clear. :thumbsup: techathy did you fit them to your car ? Going to look into that myself for my winters.
Yeah, I bought a set of 4 from that seller, they work perfectly. Just install on the wheels, fit to the car & do a pressure reset. :thumbsup:
Bit the bullet and ordered a set - total €218 ~ £176 delivered. Hopefully, when they arrive I can just drive to my local tyre fitting place, tell them to replace the standard valves with these new ones, do a reset and then drive home whilst it recalibrates?
Yes & refer to page 84 in your owners manual ;)
 
techathy said:
DLH said:
Bit the bullet and ordered a set - total €218 ~ £176 delivered. Hopefully, when they arrive I can just drive to my local tyre fitting place, tell them to replace the standard valves with these new ones, do a reset and then drive home whilst it recalibrates?
Yes & refer to page 84 in your owners manual ;)
Why page 84? :?
 

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Maybe reset has changed as my manual is different to yours?
 

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Sensors now fitted - just had to reset in iDrive and then drive away and had 4 greens in a few minutes. :D
 
Only just found this.

I was under the impression that replacement wheel sensors had to be programmed with the car's reader on cars built after 03/2014? Not so?

Good news if I've misunderstood this and the sensor pairs automatically..................... Makes a wheel swap a whole lot easier. :)
 
bob4333 said:
Only just found this.

I was under the impression that replacement wheel sensors had to be programmed with the car's reader on cars built after 03/2014? Not so?

Good news if I've misunderstood this and the sensor pairs automatically..................... Makes a wheel swap a whole lot easier. :)
Mine E89 is new (registered March 2016) and did not need any programming. Should be covered in the car's handbook?

Check what model you need here [All E89's seem to be 433MHz]
 
Thanks for the link.

There seem to be two options for my October 2014 car.

One, "Intellisense: Configurable needs to be programmed", the other "HUF: No Programming Required".

Presumably you went with the HUF and all is well?

Anyone know what the other is for? Both are recommended for a post 03/2014 car.
 
bob4333 said:
Thanks for the link.

There seem to be two options for my October 2014 car.

One, "Intellisense: Configurable needs to be programmed", the other "HUF: No Programming Required".

Presumably you went with the HUF and all is well?

Anyone know what the other is for? Both are recommended for a post 03/2014 car.
Yes, mine are the HUF and all's well. :)
 
You have to get the right units for your car. The HUF system just detects a sensor and picks up the data. The signal from the unit doesn't seem to transmit any kind of ID just data. I've not got any experience of the Intellisense system
 
Indeed.

The point that's been cleared up here for me is that there doesn't seem to be a requirement (even on my post 03/2014 car) for the aftermarket sender unit in the wheel to be programmed to the car - which for some reason I'd got stuck in my head was a requirement.

So logically, if I get the same HUF units as DLH a wheel swap should be a more straight forward affair.......?


But as an aside it still seems a wasted BMW opportunity. My daily driver (non BMW) gives me real time tyre pressure readouts together with a reference against what they should be. It's interesting to watch what driving and ambient temperature does to pressures. :o
 
Some early systems, like the system originally used on the E89, the receiver didn't tell the car what the pressure was. You simply had a simple binary value which was sent to the ECU. A 'reset' would simply tell the receiver module to use the current value from the sensor as the 'correct one' and would send a warning if the value was out. I have a feeling that due to a kickback of this system there is no system in place to report the actual values to anything which can display them.
 
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