Tpms
#11
you should have no issues. did the same but my local tire shop sells aftermarket. 100 bucks a piece. it was a little cheaper to dismount and remove but i had to make two trips to lug the other set of wheels around. long story
you should be fine
you should be fine
Bumping this up to see if anyone can give their experience to help me. I finally settled on getting a set of OEM 20" wheels with BFG Ko2's mounted for a spare full set of tires/wheels for seasonal off-road and bad weather use. I just switch them myself when needed and otherwise run the factory Goodyears on original wheels the rest of the time. Since both sets are ready to swap at any time, I kept the factory TPMS sensors in the "street" tires and had to purchase an aftermarket set of TPMS sensors from Tire-Rack. They are the 433MHz version that is "supposed" to work. The dealer wanted an obscene amount for OEM (like $400 a piece!). I've read about the problems some have experienced with aftermarket sensors, whereas some have had good success.
Tire-rack told me the following : " They will work on your Land Rover, but they have to be activated as follows" Install them on the tire. Take the TPMS tool to that tire to scan the sensor, then program it to the vehicle.
If your installer doesn't have the have a tool a rapid deflate will wake them... Put max pressure in tire then rapidly deflate to under10psi, then air back up to proper psi."
Am I kidding myself that these should work? Has anyone done this? Thanks
Tire-rack told me the following : " They will work on your Land Rover, but they have to be activated as follows" Install them on the tire. Take the TPMS tool to that tire to scan the sensor, then program it to the vehicle.
If your installer doesn't have the have a tool a rapid deflate will wake them... Put max pressure in tire then rapidly deflate to under10psi, then air back up to proper psi."
Am I kidding myself that these should work? Has anyone done this? Thanks
#12
#13
I had read somewhere that the new defender had the TPMS ids programmed to the truck and if you used a new set they had to be relearned. That was somewhere in this forum. Just in case I purchased after market TPMS sensors and then clones them with a $250 tool. Works no problem on my 2020 P400x
Have one set of 18s with 275/70/18s MTs for when we get serious and have the factory 20s for all the other times
Have one set of 18s with 275/70/18s MTs for when we get serious and have the factory 20s for all the other times
#14
No issues unless the manufacturer of the TPMS put something in them. I can imagine right now the folks at JLR trying to figure out how to make it proprietary to the VIN code. But they are standard industry for now that JLR has, blessedly, adopted. I imagine (hope) they would get push back from the tire manufacturers that they rely on if they tried to Monkey F' the industry standard. Most folks (previously, me) are mystified by them. You can absolutely buy anything off the shelf and they will work. Anything = within reason. You're on your own with Alibamazon or some other skuzzy stuff. Most tire shops will have standard fare that your Defender will have no trouble with. I put mine on and just drove. Auto-magically (pardon the pun...) they will start to work. I've switched sets and life is good again. Just give them time, some miles or a start up or two.
Last edited by GrouseK9; 05-11-2022 at 12:40 PM.
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drcoop (05-11-2022)
#16
TireRack $30 sensors are perfect
So the extra set of OEM alloys that I purchased didn’t have sensors and my trusted local installer said he would only recommend buying some directly from Land Rover because they were so “problematic and finicky”, but at a few hundred dollars each that was not a good option! So unsure as to whether I was making the right decision I took a chance and I purchased five of the $30 433MHz sensors from Tire Rack, had them shipped directly to my local tire installer, free shipping and arrived in 24 hours. Installed the new wheels with some awesome fresh BFG KO2 275/55/20’s and the sensors immediately registered tire pressures with the Defenders monitoring system. No tricks or even driving around needed.
Last edited by drcoop; 05-16-2022 at 11:04 PM.
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#17
Good to know. I will have to order some this Fall as I live in the mountains and will need snow tires this winter.
#18
So the extra set of OEM alloys that I purchased didn’t have sensors and my trusted local installer said he would only recommend buying some directly from Land Rover because they were so “problematic and finicky”, but at a few hundred dollars each that was not a good option! So unsure as to whether I was making the right decision I took a chance and I purchased five of the $30 433MHz sensors from Tire Rack, had them shipped directly to my local tire installer, free shipping and arrived in 24 hours. Installed the new wheels with some awesome fresh BFG KO2 275/55/20’s and the sensors immediately registered tire pressures with the Defenders monitoring system. No tricks or even driving around needed.
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drcoop (05-17-2022)
#19
#20
Not likely, what I have heard is that a rapid deflation is supposed to wake them up. So fill tire to like 50 psi and pull the Schrader valve as to deflate as quickly as possible.
Last edited by mikelr; 05-17-2022 at 07:18 AM.