Oct-31-2016 02:30 PM
Nov-03-2016 07:50 PM
Nov-03-2016 09:23 AM
Nov-03-2016 08:38 AM
Nov-03-2016 07:32 AM
Tumbleweed13 wrote:
Thanks for all the responses, and info. A few mentioned ride comfort in there responses. I should have been clearer. My main concern is for tire wear/ degradation. I'm more worried of blow outs and failures than a smooth ride. Thanks again.
Nov-03-2016 12:52 AM
Nov-02-2016 08:34 AM
Tumbleweed13 wrote:
I'm curious as to what you consider the correct psi, to put into your trailer tires? I have a toy hauler, 28' twin axle. Fully loaded i'm 15 - 16K lbs. The max rating on the tires, is stated at 80psi. I've always pumped them up, to 75psi. Giving me a bit of room for pressure increase, due to heat.
I have a buddy, that has a very similar set up, and he only runs 50psi. His tires have the same max psi as mine. Is this ok too?
Nov-02-2016 05:29 AM
Tumbleweed13 wrote:
I'm curious as to what you consider the correct psi, to put into your trailer tires? I have a toy hauler, 28' twin axle. Fully loaded i'm 15 - 16K lbs. The max rating on the tires, is stated at 80psi. I've always pumped them up, to 75psi. Giving me a bit of room for pressure increase, due to heat.
What do you guys think?
Nov-01-2016 07:05 PM
RedRocket204 wrote:Wild Card wrote:
For example my dually rears are rated 65psig...and thats what is on the door sticker. If i am unloaded its ridiculous tonrun max psi. Sometimes too much air is a bad thing
And what you are addressing is for a motor vehicle... not what the OP asked about as the OP's question was concerning trailer tires.
Nov-01-2016 07:01 PM
tinner12002 wrote:Wild Card wrote:
For example my dually rears are rated 65psig...and thats what is on the door sticker. If i am unloaded its ridiculous tonrun max psi. Sometimes too much air is a bad thing
That's funny because my dually tires are rated at 80psi just as the fronts. Door sticker says to run 65psi for max load but other than ride quality if I had 4-5K on my pin I do think I would bump it up above 65psi. Just my opinion. As for the OPs question, I run anywhere between 75-80psi in my trailer tires. Tires are rated at 80psi at max load so that's what I start out on trips with, if it drops to 75psi overnite I don't worry as the psi comes up when traveling and as outside temps come up.
Nov-01-2016 06:15 PM
Nov-01-2016 05:45 PM
Nov-01-2016 04:36 PM
ktmrfs wrote:Citation? Because, Goodyear says this:
In fact many of the trailer tire mfg. state the tires are designed to be run at max inflation pressure regardless of load
Since RVs can be loaded with many different configurations, the load on each tire will vary. For this reason, actual air pressure required should be determined based on the load on each individual tire....and backs it up by publishing load/inflation tables which show pressures less than the max for a load range.
Nov-01-2016 04:00 PM
mowermech wrote:
You can always try the "chalk test" to find the CORRECT tire inflation.
Make a chalk mark or two (or more) across the tread of the tire. Drive a few yards on a hard surface, then look at the chalk mark(s).
If the chalk mark(s) are worn off evenly across the tread, the inflation is just right for the present load.
If the chalk mark(s) are worn only on the sides of the tread, the tires are under-inflated for the load. Add air.
If the chalk mark(s) are worn only in the center of the tread, the tires are over-inflated. Remove air.
For best traction in braking and turns, the contact patch between the tire and road must be as large as possible. Over or under inflation reduces the size of that contact patch, and wears the tread unevenly.
Nov-01-2016 03:50 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:mike-s wrote:
Tire and loading sticker on the left side, in front near the bottom.
PSI is cold pressure, if it calls for 80 PSI, put 80 PSI in when cold. 75 PSI would be underinflated. The given pressures already take into account any pressure increase from heat.
This ^^^^^. I personally run max or even max +10. In 40 years I had one blow out.