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Tire Pressure Quandry

T-Dawg
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 2003 Fleetwood 24' Class C RV. I purchased it used with almost new tires on it. The Ford cab door jam sticker indicates LT225/75R 16E tires (front and rear) with Front @ 65PSI and Rear @ 80PSI.
The Fleetwood sticker inside the closet door in the RV indicates LT225/75R 16E tires (front and rear) with Front @ 65PSI and Rear @ 60 PSI. Normally, I would go with this recommendation, BUT...

I just realized (after a year!) that the tires on the RV the previous owner put on are actually LT215/85R 16E! I don't know how much difference this would make in the amount of PSI I should use in these tires, but would appreciate any input forum members would care to offer. Thank you for your help.
13 REPLIES 13

OldRadios
Explorer
Explorer
Harvey51 wrote:
Our E350 sticker says 65 front, 60 rear. The Michelin chart says much lower. I tried going 10 lower on both and finally settled on 60 front and 55 rear which seems to make it easier to steer than 5 higher or lower. Oh, I put an extra 2 psi on the passenger side front wheel as recommended by an old truck driver who said it helps compensate for the highway slope away from center.


That would probably be okay if you were driving the Ford cab and chassis with no box on it. I think you are asking for a blowout/tire wear/poor gas millage with that low a rear tire pressure. Go by the house sticker not by the chassis sticker until you get to a truck stop and weigh it when it's loaded and gassed up. Then take those weights and go by the tire manufacturer's chart for that exact size and model tire.
2006 Fleetwood 26Q
2010 Harley Softail Toad
2015 Ford Focus Toad
Upstate (the other) New York

Harvey51
Explorer
Explorer
Our E350 sticker says 65 front, 60 rear. The Michelin chart says much lower. I tried going 10 lower on both and finally settled on 60 front and 55 rear which seems to make it easier to steer than 5 higher or lower. Oh, I put an extra 2 psi on the passenger side front wheel as recommended by an old truck driver who said it helps compensate for the highway slope away from center.
2004 E350 Adventurer (Canadian) 20 footer - Alberta, Canada
No TV + 100W solar = no generator needed

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
Yes by some magic the tires are rated the same at same pressure.

http://www.goodyearrvtires.com/pdfs/rv_inflation.pdf

I would be a 65/80 unless there was some issue to resolve.
Might even go 70 in front and see how it rolls.

Gene_in_NE
Explorer II
Explorer II
Remember the RV has many components that play into the quality and safety of the ride.

There are the springs, the shocks, the sway bars, and the tires. All contribute to the suspension. If tire pressure was not a factor in the ride, you could just get solid rubber tires.

Too little air for the weight causes tire wear and if way too little could cause overheating and tire failure. Too much air for the weight causes a harsh ride for the occupants and for the rest of the unit (shakes it to pieces).
2002 Trail-Lite Model 211-S w/5.7 Chevy (click View Profile)
Gene

rjstractor
Nomad
Nomad
Many people overthink this. Use Ford's recommendations for this chassis, 80 rear, 65 front. Even a 24' is heavy enough that 80 psi is not too much pressure. Could you get away with 72-75? Sure, but it's better to err on the side of a little too much pressure than not enough as long as you don't exceed the tire's capacity.
2017 VW Golf Alltrack
2000 Ford F250 7.3

Oldme
Explorer
Explorer
Using Michelin's chart:
225/75/16E

65 PSI Single (Front) equates to the GAWR of the 4600# front axle E450 used through 2007 (chassis year)
and
75PSI works out to GAWR of the 5000# axle used from 2008 up.

80 PSI = MAX. Most likely over inflated for most needs.

ALL "E" load class tires are certified by DOT for the same load rating at PSI.
To get the exact PSI for your vehicle ypu need a 4 corner weight the consult the charts.

You can also call the tire manufacturers with the 4 corner weight and they will give you the PSI that you should be running.

pnichols
Explorer II
Explorer II
Another answer that may be correct for some of us with a 24' Class C is to go ahead and use the tire pressures recommended by the coach manufacturer even if these pressures seem on the high side for the size of the RV.

Winnebago recommends 65 PSI front, 80 PSI rear, on our E450 24' Itasca and that's what I use. These are the tire pressures for the maximum 14,050 lbs. that it's E450 chassis is rated for.

I use those pressures and get these affects:

1. I get great one-hand easy stirring and tracking when going down the road.

2. I get less tire sidewall heating on all six tires due to less sidewall flexing due to the more rigid tire sidewalls that result from high pressures.

3. I get no worries about "overloading our tire pressures" with any loads below chassis maximum - either as loaded when we start out or with increasing loads as we rockhound during the trip ( ๐Ÿ˜‰ ).

4. I get great lateral stability on curves, with passing big rigs, and in high cross winds due to the rigid tire sidewalls.

5. I get heavy vertical pounding in the rear from highway cracks due to the combined affects of the stiff E450 rear leaf springs and the more rigid rear dually tire sidewalls.

6. So far for about 10 years of us owning our Class C we have always gotten even tire tread wear - no baldness of any kind showing up in the centers of the treads.

I prefer use of higher than load-mandated tire pressures - IF AND ONLY IF - one does not get unevern tire wear from this and if one can put up with the stiff(er) ride.
2005 E450 Itasca 24V Class C

CapriRacer
Explorer II
Explorer II
eddard49 wrote:
There should be weight rating/recommended pressures printed right on the tire sidewalls.....at least there is on mine.


No, there's not! There's a MAXIMUM, but the tire manufacturer has no idea what vehicle those tires were going to go on, so they can NOT make a recommendation.
********************************************************************

CapriRacer

Visit my web site: www.BarrysTireTech.com

j-d
Explorer II
Explorer II
My KINGDOM for a STICKY on this! Ford and Fleetwood applied stickers that cover the maximum weight designed into the unit (chassis for Ford, coach for Fleetwood). Highly unlikely that you can get near that loading in a 24-foot coach unless your camping trips include delivery of watermelons or car batteries.

Which is why we need a sticky. The correct answer to all this is to weigh your coach, configured, loaded, fueled, populated, for actual RV travel and use. If you have access to a scale that you can get the four corners onto individually, so much the better. But it's more than adequate to use the CAT Scale found at just about every Travel Center... Pilot/FlyingJ, Love's, T/A and all those. If you tow a vehicle or trailer, have it hitched up too. For $10 you get a legal- for-trade weight slip showing Steer, Drive (rear of your coach) and Trailer.
Take a tire pressure chart such as Michelin's and adjust the pressure of the pair of fronts, and all four rears, to the numbers in the chart. You can use Michelin for other brands because the specs are industry standard. Notice the first two sizes are the ones discussed here and they ARE the same as Phil noted.
If your tires are hot by the time you get to the CAT scale, I suggest you use the charted numbers plus 05-PSI. Then adjust to what the chart says when the tires are cool and shaded the next day.
Which Chassis do you have, E350 or E450?
If God's Your Co-Pilot Move Over, jd
2003 Jayco Escapade 31A on 2002 Ford E450 V10 4R100 218" WB

eddard49
Explorer
Explorer
There should be weight rating/recommended pressures printed right on the tire sidewalls.....at least there is on mine.

pnichols
Explorer II
Explorer II
Your 215/85R16 Load Range E tires take, and require, the same pressures as 225/75R16 Load Range E tires.

I stopped using what my 24 foot Class C came stock with when new - 225/75R16 Load Range E tires - two tire replacements ago. 215/85R16 Load Rand E tires are about 1.1-1.2 inches larger diameter (but they are slightly narrower width) than are the stock 225/75R16 Load Range E tires.

I prefer the taller tire for more ground clearance. Also, my Class C's chassis is an E450, which has slightly lower rear differential gearing than an E350 chassis. The taller tires offset some of this lower rear differential gearing so that E450 fuel mileage is improved a bit up towards fuel mileage of an E350 chassis.
2005 E450 Itasca 24V Class C

1492
Moderator
Moderator
Moved from Forum Technical Support

wildtoad
Explorer II
Explorer II
You should be able to find a tire pressure chart for the brand tires in use on the Internet. Using the axle weights which should be on the Fleetwood sticker you should be able to locate the correct tire pressure.
Tom Wilds
Blythewood, SC
2016 Newmar Baystar Sport 3004
2015 Jeep Wrangler 2dr HT