
Calculate the weight of a car by using air pressure
(This activity is not in metric since most common tire pressure gauges are in PSI or Pounds per Square Inch. A metric conversion can me made at the end if necessary.)
- A car
- Tire gauge in PSI (pound per square inch)
- Ruler (inches)
- A clean flat dry piece of ground
- Thin cardboard or manila folders
1) Most tire footprints will be roughly rectangular in shape. To find the length and width of this footprint, use thin cardboard to define each tire’s footprint boundary. Shove the cardboard under the tire as tightly as possible to border each edge of the footprint.


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Shove the cardboard under the tire in all four directions.2) Roll the car off from the cardboard and measure the area bounded by the cardboard. Take measurements in inches.

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3) Use a tire gauge to measure the internal air pressure of the tire.
4) Find the amount of tire surface area touching the ground. To find this, multiply the length and width of the “footprint.” Your answer should be in square inches.
5) To find the amount of weight the tire holds, multiply the surface area by the psi in that tire.
When you multiply square inches by pounds per square inch, the square inches cancel and you’re left with pounds.
Example:
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6) Repeat these steps for all other tires.
7) Add the weight together for all four tires – that’s the total weight of the car.
To see how close you came to the real weight of the car, check the owner’s manual or look at the specification plate on the inside of the driver’s side door.
No accounting for tread.
Don’t worry about the gaps in the tire where the tread isn’t. The air inside the tire presses down on the smooth interior wall of the tire, the uneven exterior tread is irrelevant.
Tags: Car Tire, Footprint, Footprints, Four Directions, Inch Ruler, Internal Air Pressure, Manila Folders, Measurements, Metric Conversion, Pounds Per Square Inch, Psi, Shape, Square Inches, Surface Area, Thin Cardboard, Tire Gauge, Tire Presses, Tire Pressure, Tires, Wheel





