First of all, thanks to everyone who has posted on this thread!
I find I have another question. When going down the road, I can see my trailer tires in the bottoms of my rear-view mirrors (due to the extended, clip-on mirrors that I "clipped on" to my regular van mirrors, I have three rear-view mirrors on each side, both left and right. So I adjust the lowest mirror on each side to take in my trailer tires).
So, as I am driving down the road (my eyes roving checking my gauges, checking my speed, checking traffic, etc.), I also have a quick glance at my trailer tires as part of my normal, eye-roving thing. So I could immediately tell if my trailer tires looked "soft" or had any kind of "wobble" - which would indicate low tire pressure, or some other kind of tire or rig problem.
My understanding of a "blowout" has always been this: a sudden, unanticipated, tire failure. One thing that might cause a blowout, for example, is if one ran over something that suddenly punctured the tire. The Google definition is pretty close to mine: "a sudden rupture or malfunction of a part or an apparatus due to pressure, in particular the bursting of an automobile tire".
Ok, ok, the question is coming - LOL - soon, I promise!
. . . A slow loss of tire pressure (which, of course, could eventually lead to a blowout) can usually be observed if one is watching one's tires (they will begin to wobble, and no longer track straight), as I do, by watching my trailer tires in my mirrors. And, yes, I do also check my tires and do a "walk-around" of my rig every time I stop - even if I am just pulling to the side of the road for a quick pee.
Here it is, finally, LOL!! The QUESTION:
How can tire pressure sensors warn - in advance - of an impending blowout? Again, my definition of blowout (and I could be wrong here, please correct me if I am) is something sudden and unexpected, that cannot be forseen.
Thanks!
Anne