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SGTJOE's avatar
SGTJOE
Explorer II
Sep 25, 2020

Tire Pressure Chart For Continental Tires

I can't seem to find a psi chart for Continental tires. Anyone on here that can steer me to one.
  • My made pressure/loadcapacity lists

    Made my own pressure/ loadcapacity list, and placed them on my onedrive.
    You can choose per tire /axle single/axle dual given, so you dont need to devide by the number of tires on the axle.

    Made with my determined extra save formula, wich gives higher pressures then the official lists.

    Beforelooking up the weight , first add 10% for reserve to the accurate determined load in use.
    Determining the weights is the most tricky part in it all.

    Need to search on sidewall for 3 things.
    1.maximum load or loadindex ( fi 123/120 then 123 for Single load so 2 tires and rimms on the axle and 120 Dual load so 4 tires on rimm on the axle)
    2, Loadrange or plyrating to determine the pressure behind AT, is called reference-pressure
    3. Less important speedcode, to determine the speed for wich the maximum load is calculated.

    Or give it all here, and I will calculate for you, and will give a full report.
  • CapriRacer wrote:


    Sorry, but Tire Load Tables are NOT specific to a brand of tires. They are published by tire standardizing organizations such The Tire and Rim Association (US based) and are the same regardless of the manufacturer. You can sometimes find portions of those tables published by tire manufacturers, but those are only reproductions of what the standardizing body published.

    So to answer your question: ANY table will work. Just make sure the table you use is appropriate to the application. There will be difference based on what kind of vehicle and the intended service.


    Like this one,it has many sizes,just scroll thru and find what you need.

    Tire Inflation Chart
  • SGTJOE wrote:
    I can't seem to find a psi chart for Continental tires. Anyone on here that can steer me to one.


    Sorry, but Tire Load Tables are NOT specific to a brand of tires. They are published by tire standardizing organizations such The Tire and Rim Association (US based) and are the same regardless of the manufacturer. You can sometimes find portions of those tables published by tire manufacturers, but those are only reproductions of what the standardizing body published.

    So to answer your question: ANY table will work. Just make sure the table you use is appropriate to the application. There will be difference based on what kind of vehicle and the intended service.
  • SGTJOE wrote:
    I can't seem to find a psi chart for Continental tires. Anyone on here that can steer me to one.


    is this it?