Sep-13-2017 10:09 AM
Nov-05-2017 05:16 AM
JimXFarmer wrote:tropical36 wrote:JimXFarmer wrote:
I always run near the maximum tire psi as written on the sidewall . My tires run cooler which tells me that I will have less tire problems . All the tread on my tires is in FULL contact with the road as I have confirmed this visually .I get extremely long miles out of my tires that wear very evenly . This tells me the tires "like" the way I treat them with max pressure in them . Sure the ride suffers .
I'm hunkered down now and waiting in the bunker for the inevitable "incoming".......:)
LOL.......You haven't said where that might be according to your actual weight and one could that you're very close to where you should be, anyway.
Actually , when I was towing a 5th wheel or my TT , I was 15 to 30 lbs above the "recommended" pressure by weight .
Nov-04-2017 06:39 PM
Nov-04-2017 02:06 PM
wolfe10 wrote:ArchHoagland wrote:
WoodIsGood....I have the solution everyone has overlooked...
You need to fill your tires with Nitrogen!!!
As opposed to DRY air?
WHY??
Nov-04-2017 06:11 AM
ArchHoagland wrote:
WoodIsGood....I have the solution everyone has overlooked...
You need to fill your tires with Nitrogen!!!
Nov-03-2017 10:55 PM
Nov-01-2017 06:48 PM
tropical36 wrote:JimXFarmer wrote:
I always run near the maximum tire psi as written on the sidewall . My tires run cooler which tells me that I will have less tire problems . All the tread on my tires is in FULL contact with the road as I have confirmed this visually .I get extremely long miles out of my tires that wear very evenly . This tells me the tires "like" the way I treat them with max pressure in them . Sure the ride suffers .
I'm hunkered down now and waiting in the bunker for the inevitable "incoming".......:)
LOL.......You haven't said where that might be according to your actual weight and one could that you're very close to where you should be, anyway.
Nov-01-2017 04:28 PM
JimXFarmer wrote:
I always run near the maximum tire psi as written on the sidewall . My tires run cooler which tells me that I will have less tire problems . All the tread on my tires is in FULL contact with the road as I have confirmed this visually .I get extremely long miles out of my tires that wear very evenly . This tells me the tires "like" the way I treat them with max pressure in them . Sure the ride suffers .
I'm hunkered down now and waiting in the bunker for the inevitable "incoming".......:)
Nov-01-2017 09:21 AM
Oct-30-2017 06:01 PM
Oct-30-2017 04:03 PM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
The real danger with OVER-inflation is that the design footprint of the tire will be smaller and this can dangerously affect your braking and traction on dry or wet pavement.
Oct-30-2017 02:24 PM
Oct-30-2017 02:07 PM
WoodIsGood wrote:
What is considered an excessive temperature for tires? If I set my tire pressure to 5psi higher than the manufacturer's recommendation, when driving 65mph on a hot day (100+*) the pressure of the rear tires will increase by as much as 30psi (go from 85 to 115psi). At 10 degrees per 2psi increase that's a 150 degree increase in internal tire temperature. Starting at 75* the tires will reach 225* internally! This is true with both the original Goodyear G670RV and new Michelin XRV tires in size 245/70R19.5-F. This seems excessive to me, so I end up running the tires at the max recommended pressure (95psi, or 15psi higher than the chart recommends). This cuts the pressure increase while driving in half, but results in a harsher ride.
I've weighed by coach several times over the years on various truck scales (rear axle always less than 13,000 lbs. with less than 200 lbs. difference side-to-side). I've checked my pressure gauge against 5 other gauges and all were within 1psi of each other. I use a TST TPMS system (interestingly all 10 of the sensors read 3psi lower than all of my gauges at all pressures from 35psi to 115psi.).
Is a 30psi (and corresponding 150*) increase normal and I'm worrying about nothing? The front tires never increase more than 15psi.
Oct-30-2017 01:42 PM
Oct-30-2017 01:34 PM