cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Tire PSI and truck camper question

robertjp
Explorer
Explorer
My question is if the truck manufacturer (Chevy) says the max psi should be 35 (on the sticker) and on the tire it says 51 max psi, would it be ok to increase the pressure from 35 to say 45ish to account for the truck camper? Im assuming 35 is too low even if it only weighs 1400 lbs dry.?? Thanks in advance. Bob
37 REPLIES 37

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
It's not that complicated.

What most people are telling you here is that IT DOES NOT MATTER. 35PSI or 51PSI, those P-metric passenger car tires have the SAME LOAD CARRYING CAPACITY.

Try 35PSI and see if you like it. Try 51PSI and see if you like it better or worse. Try some pressures in between.

Unless you are just absolutely nerve-dead, you will know quickly if there are any problems. Use your common sense, TURN AROUND, and limp home if you don't like how things feel.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

SidecarFlip
Explorer III
Explorer III
All too complex for me. I just run maximum advertised (on the tire sidewall) cold inflation pressure, all the time on the rear and the OEM recommended inflation pressure on the front. Don't care about riding comfort, it's a truck, not a Coupe DeVille.
2015 Backpack SS1500
1997 Ford 7.3 OBS 4x4 CC LB

Kayteg1
Explorer II
Explorer II
One more time - find manufacturer inflation chart and use it.

CapriRacer
Explorer II
Explorer II
There seems to be some misconceptions about the max tire pressure listed on the sidewall of tires:

1) P type tires will only have 35psi, 44 psi, and 51 psi listed as the max (for Standard Load). Exceptions: Some tires are calculated in metric units and the max would be 36 psi, 44 psi, and 51 psi. Also Extra Load tires will have the max of 41 psi or 50 psi.

2) In all cases, Standard Load P type tires carry the max load at 35 psi (except metric calculated ones where it is 36 psi), even those labled with a max of 44 and 51 psi.

3) LT tires (radials) will have a max pressure of 50 psi, (Load Range C), 65 psi (LR D), 80 psi (LR E), etc.
********************************************************************

CapriRacer

Visit my web site: www.BarrysTireTech.com

lawrosa
Explorer
Explorer
Deleted
Mike L ... N.J.

2006 Silverado ext cab long bed. 3:42 rear. LM7 5.3 motor. 300 hp 350 ft lbs torgue @ 4000 rpms
2018 coachmen Catalina sbx 261bh

lawrosa
Explorer
Explorer
Grit dog wrote:
Yes you can air up to what the tire says.
Your little camper will be about 2000lbs if your lucky. Get any flavor of load range E tires so you can stiffen up the back. Will be a much better ride in your half ton. And you can air back down to 35psi when you don't have the camper.


Isnt that bad advice telling him to put a load range E on a truck with P rated tires ( most likely) and rims?

Rims are not rated for those higher pressures, and the idiot at the store will probably not be smart enough to put rigid valve stems on too.
Mike L ... N.J.

2006 Silverado ext cab long bed. 3:42 rear. LM7 5.3 motor. 300 hp 350 ft lbs torgue @ 4000 rpms
2018 coachmen Catalina sbx 261bh

lawrosa
Explorer
Explorer
OK so now Im confused. Can I up the back to 51 PSI or not? Im not an expert. I was going to but after reading the last post, Im not so sure. Thank you.


Listen clearly. There were questions asked and you didnt answer.

You can put whatever pressure you want in the tires you have from the 35psi whats on your door tag to the 51 psi on the side wall.

Here is the thing though.

1. If you have P rated tires the side wall max load rating on the sidewall gets derated some 9%.

That was 2238 lbs per tire. Not the 2460 it states on the sidewall.

Those P rated tires will carry that derated weight whether you put 35 psi in or 51 psi in the tires.

51 psi may stiffen the tire up some but its still a 2 ply sidewall marshmellow.

You will not get a higher rating on a p rated tire running more air in it.


2. Now if they are LT tires then @ 51 psi you will carry the full load of what the side wall says of 2460 lbs.

LT tires have inflation charts. 2460 @51 psi, 2200 lbs @ 44 psi, 1950 lbs @ 40 psi, etc etc...

Example:

LT 265/70/17 or 265/70/17. Same tire but different because of the "LT" on the sidewall. You also may have an "XL" on the side wall.

But if you dont want to tell us then go ahead and put 51 psi in the tires.

I guess it dont matter.

For my P rated tires of a 35 psi door tag I put 40 psi in when towing. My max on sidewall is 44 psi.

When I put the LT tires on when these wear out I will inflate to the max 44 psi on the side wall when towing.
Mike L ... N.J.

2006 Silverado ext cab long bed. 3:42 rear. LM7 5.3 motor. 300 hp 350 ft lbs torgue @ 4000 rpms
2018 coachmen Catalina sbx 261bh

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
robertjp wrote:
jadatis wrote:
Your tires are most likely Standard load P-tires, and on those they only give maximum allowed cold pressure.
The maximum load of tire can be carried up to 99m/h AT 35 psi , wich is standard reference-pressure for P-tires SL. So if you drive only below 99m/h you may use the 35 psi.

The space between 35psi and 51 psi is used to highen up the referce-pressure ( further AT-pressure) for higher speed then 99m/h with a system depending on speedcode of tire. Also for alighnment camber angle above 2 degr.

LT tires give on sidewall the AT-pressure , and in earlyer days higher was allowed and even adviced upto 10 psi extra, but nowadays the tiremakers dont allow it anymore, and so the AT-pressure is the maximum allowed cold pressure.

So tiremakers allow for SL P-tires a higher pressure then AT, and if you use it to cover some higher load on tire then maximum load, they cant prove you did it for that higher load then max ,that they dont allow, but mother nature will be happy with it.

To high pressure gives that less deflection of tire, that things go bumping, so to high is not bad for the tire, but bad for your kidneys and teeth-fillings.


OK so now Im confused. Can I up the back to 51 PSI or not? Im not an expert. I was going to but after reading the last post, Im not so sure. Thank you.


A lot of irrelevant info. No need to overthink it. Yes they say 51 psi You can and should put 51 psi in them when hauling a heavy load.
Check out a load v inflation chart for tires, any tires. You'll see the relationship of capacity relating to pressure. But it's not rocket science. You have 2500lb cap tires you're putting at least 2000 lbs on each. You should be in the upper end of the max psi for the best performance for that load.
Some of that above confuses me too........
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Kayteg1
Explorer II
Explorer II
jimh425 wrote:
I'd probably look at load inflation charts for those tires, but the tires won't be worse for wear at max pressure. The handling will be different, and you could get some abnormal tire wear especially when unloaded.

The tire ratings in the door are designed to give you a guide for what is the pressure you should run at sticker max GVWR.

Would have to double check it, but all my vehicles do have double chart for light load and heavy load.
Good tire manufacturers will publish charts with recommended pressure at given load.
If you can't find one, rule of thumb is to inflate to the same % of max pressure what % of max load you are carrying.
Than again - all you will loose riding at max tire pressure is comfort, while you will save fuel .

robertjp
Explorer
Explorer
jadatis wrote:
Your tires are most likely Standard load P-tires, and on those they only give maximum allowed cold pressure.
The maximum load of tire can be carried up to 99m/h AT 35 psi , wich is standard reference-pressure for P-tires SL. So if you drive only below 99m/h you may use the 35 psi.

The space between 35psi and 51 psi is used to highen up the referce-pressure ( further AT-pressure) for higher speed then 99m/h with a system depending on speedcode of tire. Also for alighnment camber angle above 2 degr.

LT tires give on sidewall the AT-pressure , and in earlyer days higher was allowed and even adviced upto 10 psi extra, but nowadays the tiremakers dont allow it anymore, and so the AT-pressure is the maximum allowed cold pressure.

So tiremakers allow for SL P-tires a higher pressure then AT, and if you use it to cover some higher load on tire then maximum load, they cant prove you did it for that higher load then max ,that they dont allow, but mother nature will be happy with it.

To high pressure gives that less deflection of tire, that things go bumping, so to high is not bad for the tire, but bad for your kidneys and teeth-fillings.


OK so now Im confused. Can I up the back to 51 PSI or not? Im not an expert. I was going to but after reading the last post, Im not so sure. Thank you.

SidecarFlip
Explorer III
Explorer III
I always run my rears at the maximum sidewall pressure, in my case 80 PSI, with screw down valve stems not rubber ones... that eventually rot. Front's at recommended OEM pressure, in my case again, 60 PSI and screw down stems again.
2015 Backpack SS1500
1997 Ford 7.3 OBS 4x4 CC LB

jadatis
Explorer
Explorer
Your tires are most likely Standard load P-tires, and on those they only give maximum allowed cold pressure.
The maximum load of tire can be carried up to 99m/h AT 35 psi , wich is standard reference-pressure for P-tires SL. So if you drive only below 99m/h you may use the 35 psi.

The space between 35psi and 51 psi is used to highen up the referce-pressure ( further AT-pressure) for higher speed then 99m/h with a system depending on speedcode of tire. Also for alighnment camber angle above 2 degr.

LT tires give on sidewall the AT-pressure , and in earlyer days higher was allowed and even adviced upto 10 psi extra, but nowadays the tiremakers dont allow it anymore, and so the AT-pressure is the maximum allowed cold pressure.

So tiremakers allow for SL P-tires a higher pressure then AT, and if you use it to cover some higher load on tire then maximum load, they cant prove you did it for that higher load then max ,that they dont allow, but mother nature will be happy with it.

To high pressure gives that less deflection of tire, that things go bumping, so to high is not bad for the tire, but bad for your kidneys and teeth-fillings.

lawrosa
Explorer
Explorer
robertjp wrote:
Yes 2460 lbs max load on the tire rating. Im assuming this is in addition to the truck?


again if they are P rated tires then they get derated about 9%..

your 2460 is 2238 lbs @ 35psi. It dont matter if you put 51 in there except it will stiffen the side wall.

If they are LT tires then its 2460 @ 51 psi...

What does the tire say on the side wall? Does it have an LT written before the tire size? Or an XL rating?

Better yet just tell us the make, model size of tire. we can look it up..
Mike L ... N.J.

2006 Silverado ext cab long bed. 3:42 rear. LM7 5.3 motor. 300 hp 350 ft lbs torgue @ 4000 rpms
2018 coachmen Catalina sbx 261bh

robertjp
Explorer
Explorer
Yes 2460 lbs max load on the tire rating. Im assuming this is in addition to the truck?

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
51 would be the number with a load. Thise tires are rated for like 2500lbs or so, correct?
Empty 1/2 ton you have about 2500lbs on the rear axle. Add the camper puts you pretty close to max.
Front axle likely won't have much addl weight, depending on the campers center of mass, but the stiffer handling will be welcome so I'd run the fronts at the max too.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold