way2roll wrote:
Cruisineasy wrote:
I have a 2011 31' Jayco Greyhawk. I used to set the tire pressure at 80psi all around. The front always felt like it was drifting. Not much fun to drive. I lowered the front to 75psi. Made a world of difference.
Was this adjustment made on any determining facts or just from the hip? Without weighing the rig and comparing against the tire manufacturers charts, it's just a guess. Personally I find advice based on a guess is a bad idea.
Yet it’s of almost no significance because if 75 psi cold is too low and makes a discernible negative difference in steering then 80 is likely overloaded as well. And 75 cold is close to 80 with tire heat and over 80 if ambient is warmer as well.
So it’s not a “bad” idea. A bad idea might be thinking a much lower pressure is appropriate without at least knowing a ball park weight.
It’s not rocket surgery. And load/inflation tables are merely a starting point for the min safe pressure vs weight for ALL conditions. There’s acceptable adjustability each way depending on actual conditions.
OP was/is nowhere near shooting himself in the foot by shooting from the hip….except maybe in the minds of some rvnet members.
Or think about it the old fashioned practical way. What % of passenger vehicles or even commercial vehicles are out there pounding the pavement every day with totally unknown tire pressures? The answer is a shat load of them. And aside from the extremes like driving on a half flat tire, how many end up on the side of the road with a low pressure blowout? Objectively, very very few. A very minuscule fraction of 1% at best.
Now is it better to be informed and diligent? Absolutely. But there’s a huge range of acceptability between being super diligent and obtusely negligent.
And the feller who consciously adjusted his tire pressure a small amount and knows and checks pressure (obviously) is real close to the super diligent end of the spectrum.
Saying it’s a bad idea as a sort of blanket statement is just over reacting.