H3LZSN1P3R
You're doing it wrong
Its fine for meSomething is wrong with your post. Only 2 of the 4 pics display. Now the tire pics are gone
Its fine for meSomething is wrong with your post. Only 2 of the 4 pics display. Now the tire pics are gone
no that you are close use the 10% rule to confirm everything is hunky dory. from stone cold at 40/35 your fronts should hit about 44psi after 10 miles of highway driving and your rears like 39psi. if they are 43-45 38-40 you are golden.Okay. Went and got some real sidewalk chalk and had some time today to devote to the experiment. I was trying to use little white pieces of chalkboard chalk and it just wasn't working that well. Between the chalk and being rushed for time I don't think I was giving the chalk test the time I needed to do it correctly.
Started at 60 PSI all four corners. Test one, all four tires way over inflated (for the purposes of chalk test, I'm sure 60 is fine)
Dropped to 55 front 50 rear. Test 2, starting to a little difference. Outside 3rds still much less wear the middle.
Dropped to 50 front 45 rear. Test 3, much better but outside chalk still much less worn than middle.
Dropped to 45 front 40 rear. Test 4, almost there.
Dropped to 40 front 35 rear. Test 5, what do you know, almost perfect chalk wear edge to edge.
I was for sure it was going to be under inflated at 40/35 when I started the test.
Took it for a test drive. Much happier with the ride and handling now. Even more so than when I went from delivery PSI of 80 to 60.
When I look at the vehicle from the side parked the tires look way too low, but I've probably been driving around on over inflated tires my entire life, so I'm not used to the visual.
I said when I first got this truck the ride was harsh. That was at 80 PSI. It was tooth rattling. Advised to drop to 60. Yuge difference, much more like the FX4 that I just got rid off.
Now at 40/35 it's a plush ride. 99% of my F150 with the four corner Bilstien Kit. My Fords tires were I'm sure over inflated for 10+ years. Wonder how nice the ride would have been had I had them set correctly?
Can't wait to drive it off road. I'm guessing it will be much more compliant over our rocky southwest terrain. Drove it the other day off road at 60/58 and it wasn't bad, but still bounced me around pretty good.
Learned a ton from this forum in the past 8 months. Grateful.
Its fine for me
no that you are close use the 10% rule to confirm everything is hunky dory. from stone cold at 40/35 your fronts should hit about 44psi after 10 miles of highway driving and your rears like 39psi. if they are 43-45 38-40 you are golden.
5 would be ok especially at 40psi cold now I am not talking running for 100 miles because that could end up heating up more which is understandable. go for 5-10 miles at 60mph and you should be 44-45 up front..So if they heat up more than about 5psi they are generating too much heat, correct?
I’m gonna hit a CAT scale next time I’m up that way. And again once I get the airstream hooked up.

I know. I'm ridiculous.I would say you are pretty darn close and would just leave them a 42 and 31.I bet they feel way better than when you started this obsession lol.
oh I am the same way trust me. if you are in AZ 20-30 minutes on the highway is all you need. Sure if you drive longer in hotter temps they will go up a bit but you pretty much are how I would have them.I know. I'm ridiculous.
I run 65 pounds in my tires on a 2500 cummins. They are wearing well and riding ok. I tried the low pressure route and it road like it was wallowing on the dips and turns. At 65lbs I also dont have to mess with airing up unless I tow heavy. Normally I tow 4K to 8K so no worries so far.
oh I am the same way trust me. if you are in AZ 20-30 minutes on the highway is all you need. Sure if you drive longer in hotter temps they will go up a bit but you pretty much are how I would have them.
I just realized it has a one gallon tank. Im not sure if their two gallon would run on the 400 inverter. I didn't mean to get off topic.

I know I'm bringing back an older thread, but obviously there are a lot of tire pressure threads and thought I'd simply add on to this one.I run 65 pounds in my tires on a 2500 cummins. They are wearing well and riding ok. I tried the low pressure route and it road like it was wallowing on the dips and turns. At 65lbs I also dont have to mess with airing up unless I tow heavy. Normally I tow 4K to 8K so no worries so far.
The psi listed on the door jamb are for max GVWR of the truck so with the plow and balast there is no need to run more than 60 psi fyi. I run 60 front and rear unless i am towing heavy that includes all winter with the 800lbs plow and 800 lbs ballast weightI know I'm bringing back an older thread, but obviously there are a lot of tire pressure threads and thought I'd simply add on to this one.
SL1 sums it up for me, I see many people here that run pressures in the 40's, and a few talking about 35 psi cold. I know it's about the truck setup, gross weight, etc, but for me I can't see running E rated tires at those kind of lower pressures, . On a series of 2500's I've tended to run (all cold #'s) 60 front and 55-60 rear unloaded, 65 front and 70 rear towing medium (5,000- 8,000 lb. loads). Plowing I air up the fronts to 70-75 and rears 65-70, carrying 500 lbs. in the bed.
I'm always willing to learn and be proven wrong, just thought I'd comment since I was spending a fair amount of time reading threads here.