Jun-16-2015 07:08 AM
Jun-17-2015 07:15 AM
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Jun-17-2015 06:02 AM
Jun-17-2015 04:29 AM
Jun-17-2015 03:17 AM
Jun-16-2015 10:05 AM
kaydeejay wrote:
If they are OEM size tires, inflate to the cold pressure shown on your tire placard on the trailer.
This may or may not be the same as the max pressure on the tire sidewall.
After an overnight cool-off in Florida, check again and adjust to the same pressure as before. You may need to let some air OUT if the new ambient temp is higher than when you left home.
Jun-16-2015 09:31 AM
Jun-16-2015 09:25 AM
Jun-16-2015 08:48 AM
downtheroad wrote:I'm pretty much in agreement with this but not everyone fills tires to the maximum pressure listed on the sidewall and there may be reasons for that.
Don't make this more complicated than it is....(Rv'er tend to make things complicated.)
Early morning - check and fill your tires to the max as recommended on the side wall and the placard on your tow vehicle...
Jun-16-2015 08:21 AM
ScottG wrote:X-2
Yes, on the trailer tires, run at full pressure. Lowering it is actually harder on them as they have to flex more and that makes even more heat.
Jun-16-2015 08:04 AM
Jun-16-2015 07:52 AM
Jun-16-2015 07:36 AM
GordonThree wrote:
Why do you run max pressure versus recommended pressure? Manufacture's recommended pressure gives you a safety range to handle increases in ambient temp.
Jun-16-2015 07:20 AM