On the door for stock tires, it says 60 P. S I front and rear. Doesn't show any difference for load. What is everybody running with 35 A/Ts and maybe a 12000 pound 5er?
I don’t have a cap on my bed, so mine is lighter. I just got my bypass cable, Vgate vLinker MC+ Bluetooth OBD2 and I just purchased JScan, so I can adjust TPMS pressures.I wouldn’t go below your recommended psi per load. It’s ok to run more depending on your preferences and ride
Here’s my thought process from my smol brain
My Hemi with all my tools and junk and the family but no trailer weighs 8200 or 4600F/3600R on CAT scale
285/75-18 (35”od) max 4080 @80 can support 2500lb at 40psi
2500x2= 5000lb > 4600lb front axle actual
2500x2= 5000lb > 3600lb rear axle actual and I can pick up 1000lb of crap and not need to worry about adding air to the rear tires.
2500x4= 10k which also happens to be GVWR so it gives me warm fuzzies.
My ride is comfortable to me at 40psi on the tires I have.
When I pull my enclosed I bump up to 45 or 50psi for extra load margin and so stiffen up the sidewalls a bit. Trailer is ~900lb tongue weight typically
topper, winch/bumper, decked etc all adds up quick. I think combined vehicle weight is what you reach quicker than max trailer if you have a bunch of baggage like me.I don’t have a cap on my bed, so mine is lighter. I just got my bypass cable, Vgate vLinker MC+ Bluetooth OBD2 and I just purchased JScan, so I can adjust TPMS pressures.
Truck empty weight as driven: 7,420lbs
Max payload: 2,822lbs vs as driven it’s about 2,580lbs
- Front axle 4140 lbs
- Rear 3280 lbs
Max trailer: 16,620lbs per Ram but payload/tongue weight will never let me get that high.