Sep-13-2017 10:09 AM
Oct-27-2017 05:41 AM
seekingsunnyskies wrote:
Sorry for the delay. We recommend 10% and 20% above. By going 25% above we will not void a warranty its up to you. Typically you should see 15 to 20% higher psi when tires are hot, and 14 to 22% above ambient on temp.
Feel free to contact me with any questions at 210-420-0132
Thanks,
Mike Benson
TST TPMS
210-420-0132
Sep-16-2017 11:37 PM
Sep-16-2017 06:36 AM
Blaster Man wrote:
You are getting lots of information, much of it incorrect. There is a tire expert on the forum, maybe he'll come on and give some good information...he was a tire dealer for 40 years and gives seminars at many rallies. His advice is to check the weight on the chart, and if using individual wheel weight, add 10% or 10 lbs to the pressure noted in the manual for the heavy side, and use that pressure for all tires on that axle. If not using individual wheel weight, divide the total weight on the axle by two, and add 10% or 10 lbs PSI to the pressure noted in the manual to both sides...same pressure for all tires on that axle. In either case do all these reading prior to driving, either the day prior or morning before starting.
Sep-15-2017 01:16 PM
Sep-15-2017 10:05 AM
Sep-14-2017 11:28 PM
All I could afford wrote:
Please double check your weights, weight distribution and pressures... Something just doesn't seem right there.
Sep-14-2017 07:00 AM
STBRetired wrote:
I run Michelin XRVs on my MH. Fronts at 90, rears at 94 when cold, which is 3 PSI above what the weight charts say. After driving for several hours at expressway speeds, fronts are 104, rears are 108. So a 14 PSI gain. 30 seems excessive.
Sep-14-2017 06:16 AM
Sep-14-2017 05:37 AM
Sep-14-2017 05:05 AM
WoodIsGood wrote:
I added air as I believed (and still believe) that they were heating up excessively and didn't want to overheat and damage $2K worth of brand new tires.
Michelin's chart lists the minimum pressure for a given carry capacity. Adding 10 psi just made the volume of air in the tires roughly the same as if I'd started the trip at 95 psi (the sidewall listed max cold pressure). By the time I was rolling down the highway again the pressures were all at or below what they were when I stopped (because the tires had cooled down some). And they continued to drop slightly until settling in at about 108-110psi. In the morning they were all within 2psi of 95psi (verifying my above claim about air volume). I equalized pressures to 95 before resuming my trip.
Thermodynamics is a pretty solid science. At 80-95psi a 10* increase in temperature results in a roughly 2psi increase in tire pressure (at 30-35 psi starting pressure the same 10* increase in temperature results in a roughly 1psi increase in tire pressure). Since the hubs and brakes weren't heating the wheels (yes, I checked them for excess heat) the source of the heat for the air inside the tires had to be from the rubber. And the rubber had to be at least as hot as, if not hotter than, the air inside the tires. And based on the applicable thermodynamic equations, the air was around 250*. That just sounds too darned hot to me.
Sep-14-2017 04:47 AM
Sep-13-2017 09:06 PM
Tyler0215 wrote:
Why did you add more air to the tires?
If the Michelin chart says 85 psi for the weight you are carrying, thats the pressure you should run. Don't be adjusting the pressure when the tires are hot.
Sep-13-2017 02:12 PM
Ivylog wrote:
It's normal to have a 10-15% increase in pressure on a hot day BUT you are getting a 30+ % increase. I would try +10 psi.
Sep-13-2017 01:48 PM
Sep-13-2017 01:30 PM