โJul-19-2015 02:43 PM
โJul-20-2015 06:38 AM
โJul-20-2015 06:22 AM
profdant139 wrote:
gmw, am I reading that right? You put more air in the front than the rear when towing? I guess I had it backwards!
And you are right that I am not coming anywhere near the load limit on those tires, so I guess I can back down from my high pressure settings. I don't want to run the tires so low, however, that the sidewall flexes and heats up the tire during normal highway driving.
And on the third hand, more psi equates to better mileage, but too much psi will cause wear on the centers of the tread.
โJul-20-2015 04:36 AM
โJul-19-2015 11:14 PM
โJul-19-2015 09:36 PM
gmw photos wrote:
Dan, I would suggest doing some reading on the off road forums. I think you'll find that most of the guys will say that somewhat lower pressures will help you avoid rock punctures.
EDIT: My feeling is there is no situation, at all, for those tires on that truck where you would run 80 psi. Or even 60 to 70. The truck just can't carry that much load ( weight ).
I also have a F350 dually with load range E ( 80 psi max ) tires, and even with the 14K pound horse trailer on the back, I don't run 80 psi ( but, it's got four tires in the back, but still, there is more weight on the back axle alone than what your Tacoma, or my Frontier weighs in total. I'm usually at 5600 to 5800 on the rear axle ) And at that I run 60 in the rears and 70 in the fronts.
profdant139 wrote:
gmw, am I reading that right? You put more air in the front than the rear when towing? I guess I had it backwards!
And you are right that I am not coming anywhere near the load limit on those tires, so I guess I can back down from my high pressure settings. I don't want to run the tires so low, however, that the sidewall flexes and heats up the tire during normal highway driving.
And on the third hand, more psi equates to better mileage, but too much psi will cause wear on the centers of the tread.
โJul-19-2015 09:15 PM
โJul-19-2015 06:27 PM
โJul-19-2015 06:18 PM
profdant139 wrote:
rhagfo, you said something interesting about sharp rocks and pressure -- I have heard of airing down for sand and mud, but is that true of rocks, too?? Pardon my ignorance.
โJul-19-2015 05:55 PM
โJul-19-2015 05:14 PM
โJul-19-2015 04:08 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
With that 2500# trailer (tongue weight of what------300#?)
I would just run 50 psi front and 55 psi rear all the time.
It's not like you are piling on huge weight increase from non-towing to towing!
โJul-19-2015 04:06 PM
โJul-19-2015 03:31 PM