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Tire Inflation Guide

Kountryguy
Explorer
Explorer
Can anyone tell me where I can find a chart telling what pressure I should run for the axle weights that I have? Thanks
26 REPLIES 26

NC_Hauler
Explorer
Explorer
blt2ski wrote:
An E rated tire of the same size as a D rated tire, will carry the same load at the same pressure up to the max of the D rated tire. The E rated tire has the ability to carry a higher pressure, hence a heavier load.

A tire pressure load chart works, I use the chalk method. Ie put some tire chalk on the tread, drive down the road, if all of the chalk goes away in a 100 yds or so, you either have the correct pressure, or too little. If a partial goes away, ie the middle only, you have too much psi. You can see the same effect after going thru a puddle and stopping a few yds later, or if the middle has dust, the outer does not.....

Not sure there is truly a right or wrong way per say. Other than, not fun to see the middles wear out of the tread before the outer. Then you know you had too much psi, and wore out the tire too soon!

marty


Marty..WAYYYY to much work and I'm not lazy...Pretty doggone sure from what I've gleaned from Michelin, Continental/General and Goodyear, that running at sidewall max recommended psi will NOT cause issues with the tire...IF used as an E or G rated tire in replacement of an E or G rated tire..... I've never seen the middle of my tire wear abnormally....

Again, if one has the time and equipment to weigh each tire, have at it, but I'm not hooking up and running back and forth over something to check tire pattern AND I don't have access close by, or the time, to find a place where I can get each tire weighed....I'll go by manufacturers recommendations and again, the GY G614's on my 5er now, run at 110 psi and look as good as they did the day they were put on my 5er in Oct. of 2010....
Jim & Kathy, (Boxers, Buddy & Sheba)
2016 Ram 3500 DRW Longhorn 4X4/CC/LB/Aisin/4.10/rear air assist ...Pearl White.
2016 DRV MS 36RSSB3/ W&D/ slide toppers/ DTV satellite/ 5.5K Onan propane gen.
B&W RVK3600 Hitch
Fulltiming in WV & TX
USAF 71-75 Viet Nam Vet

blt2ski
Moderator
Moderator
An E rated tire of the same size as a D rated tire, will carry the same load at the same pressure up to the max of the D rated tire. The E rated tire has the ability to carry a higher pressure, hence a heavier load.

A tire pressure load chart works, I use the chalk method. Ie put some tire chalk on the tread, drive down the road, if all of the chalk goes away in a 100 yds or so, you either have the correct pressure, or too little. If a partial goes away, ie the middle only, you have too much psi. You can see the same effect after going thru a puddle and stopping a few yds later, or if the middle has dust, the outer does not.....

Not sure there is truly a right or wrong way per say. Other than, not fun to see the middles wear out of the tread before the outer. Then you know you had too much psi, and wore out the tire too soon!

marty
92 Navistar dump truck, 7.3L 7 sp, 4.33 gears with a Detroit no spin
2014 Chevy 1500 Dual cab 4x4
92 Red-e-haul 12K equipment trailer

Cummins12V98
Explorer III
Explorer III
As I have said here before. Contact GY Tech Support for what they say. I did when going from GY E to GY G. They said to use the chart on RV for STOCK RATED TIRES. But if you are up rating the tires use the inflation chart for your new tires and add 5psi. For example my RV said 80psi and my load need that psi, surprise surprise! Now with the G tires the load still needed 80psi but by adding 5 psi I was at the proper tire inflation for the tire.

They said they defer to RV label when stock tires are replaced with stock but the charts are there for a reason. They also said too much air as in 110psi for my load will give a more harsh ride along with less stopping traction.

I used GY inflation method for 5 years and a lot of miles with perfect tire wear and never a problem.
2015 RAM LongHorn 3500 Dually CrewCab 4X4 CUMMINS/AISIN RearAir 385HP/865TQ 4:10's
37,800# GCVWR "Towing Beast"

"HeavyWeight" B&W RVK3600

2016 MobileSuites 39TKSB3 highly "Elited" In the stable

2007.5 Mobile Suites 36 SB3 29,000# Combined SOLD

NC_Hauler
Explorer
Explorer
past-MIdirector wrote:
Need to look at the load range on the replacement tires. Most RV replacement tires are one or two load ranges high with a higher max. pressure then what was originally put on. I was taught many moons ago that to be safe air tires to 10% of what the max. pressure is on the tire. This has worked for 40 years now.


Well, I'll admit I've never done that, I've alway's aired to max sidewall rated psi...never added an extra 10% which would be loading a Michelin "E" rated RIBS to 88# instead of 80 and airing my GY G614's to 121 psi instead of the recommended 110psi...one could do that, but again, I've been towing since 75, (and some before that), and also never had an issue... and thats worked for me for almost 40 years also...

My experience has seen most newer RV's with tires on them that are "just close" enough to cover axle rating...as little as the manufacturer can get away with and cut corners on cost. It's rare that I've seen a "G" rated tire where an "E" rated tire would have worked...it's very, very rare.
Jim & Kathy, (Boxers, Buddy & Sheba)
2016 Ram 3500 DRW Longhorn 4X4/CC/LB/Aisin/4.10/rear air assist ...Pearl White.
2016 DRV MS 36RSSB3/ W&D/ slide toppers/ DTV satellite/ 5.5K Onan propane gen.
B&W RVK3600 Hitch
Fulltiming in WV & TX
USAF 71-75 Viet Nam Vet

WayneLee
Explorer
Explorer
The quality of the 'ride' is partially dependent on tire pressure. The tire mfg site gives you the minimum pressure to carry the weight, while the tire sidewall gives you another maximum pressure. Also, the coach mfg gives you a sheet with their "recommended" pressure. In general, the lower the tire pressure you have, the smoother the ride you will have.

For example, on my coach, I have Michelins and I know the loaded weight on each corner. According to the Michelin charts, I can carry 85 pounds on the front tires and 90 pounds on the back. The max pressure listed on the tire is something like 115, and the mfg chart recommends 110 front and back. I chose to carry each tire at 95 pounds which seems like a compromise all around plus I get a good ride at that pressure.

I ran my calculations past the dealer, who said "huh?". I called the Monaco and talked to them. They confirmed my calculations and my decision to carry 95 pounds pressure.

Wayne Lee
Out West Somewhere



2016 Forest River Sunseeker 3050DS Class C | Hummer H3 dinghy

wilber1
Explorer
Explorer
These are load rating charts not recommended pressures. All they do is give the maximum load a tire can carry at a certain pressure.
"Never trust a man who has not a single redeeming vice" WSC

2011 RAM 3500 SRW
2015 Grand Design Reflection 303RLS

past-MIdirector
Explorer
Explorer
Need to look at the load range on the replacement tires. Most RV replacement tires are one or two load ranges high with a higher max. pressure then what was originally put on. I was taught many moons ago that to be safe air tires to 10% of what the max. pressure is on the tire. This has worked for 40 years now.

powderman426
Explorer
Explorer
I just use Max side wall pressure. I would rather be over than under.
Ron & Charlotte
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NC_Hauler
Explorer
Explorer
CapriRacer wrote:
Word of caution:

Those inflation charts are MINIMUMS!! They are NOT recommendations.

And just an FYI: Inflation pressure only has a minor effect on tire wear. On a trailer, wear is hardly ever the issue - unless you have an alignment problem. So you can use a lot more pressure than the chart says and still have good tire wear.


EXACTLY!! I use the placard that shows recommended tire psi that is located on the rv. One will not go wrong by airing to max sidewall pressure either...I run GY G rated G614's and it's recommended by 5er manufacturer as well as Goodyear, to run these tires on this 5er at 110 psi.....When I had RIBS, Michelin recommended to run them at 80 psi, (also what was on the placard of the 5er I had at the time..same psi rating as OEM tires that came on that 5er).

It just doesn't seem "real world" to weigh each tire and air each tire to a possible different amount.s. Don't know how many could realistically do this on these forums...Much more real world and far simpler to, at the very least, to air tire to max sidewall pressure, IF tire is same size and tire rating as OEM tire was..
Jim & Kathy, (Boxers, Buddy & Sheba)
2016 Ram 3500 DRW Longhorn 4X4/CC/LB/Aisin/4.10/rear air assist ...Pearl White.
2016 DRV MS 36RSSB3/ W&D/ slide toppers/ DTV satellite/ 5.5K Onan propane gen.
B&W RVK3600 Hitch
Fulltiming in WV & TX
USAF 71-75 Viet Nam Vet

CapriRacer
Explorer II
Explorer II
Word of caution:

Those inflation charts are MINIMUMS!! They are NOT recommendations.

And just an FYI: Inflation pressure only has a minor effect on tire wear. On a trailer, wear is hardly ever the issue - unless you have an alignment problem. So you can use a lot more pressure than the chart says and still have good tire wear.
********************************************************************

CapriRacer

Visit my web site: www.BarrysTireTech.com

Golden_HVAC
Explorer
Explorer
Check this site too.


http://www.michelintruck.com/michelintruck_en_us/tires-retreads/load-inflation-tables.jsp

Fred.
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Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
Check your tire mfg.s website for the load chart for their tires.
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