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Tire pressure vs temp?

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Looking for opinions. Left south Louisiana with temperature in the 80's arrived in North Carolina with temperatures in the 30's. Needless to say, tire pressures in the morning are considerably lower, should I adjust back to 95/90 psi or run as is?

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Adjust pressure before driving at coldest temperature. IE: I use 107# for all tires. Do not decrease pressure through the day. Adjust again the next morning, cold. 

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OTOH, you could do as I, inflate to the Federal Tire Placard listed pressures in the vehicle and never half to adjust tire pressure because of ambient temperature.

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2 hours ago, rayin said:

OTOH, you could do as I, inflate to the Federal Tire Placard listed pressures in the vehicle and never half to adjust tire pressure because of ambient temperature.

How does that work? Whatever you choose as the pressure you want in the tires, you'll need to adjust as the weather gets cold. If you set to the placard pressure in August you'll have to readjust the pressure as fall and winter come on, unless you're staying where the weather never changes.

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The placard is not necessarily the proper pressure based on actual weight. Weigh, check charts for your tires, inflate while cold to the pressure you found on the chart. Two manufacturers have told me to add ten pounds for safety. 

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2 hours ago, richard5933 said:

How does that work? Whatever you choose as the pressure you want in the tires, you'll need to adjust as the weather gets cold. If you set to the placard pressure in August you'll have to readjust the pressure as fall and winter come on, unless you're staying where the weather never changes.

Look at the placard in your bus. The listed air pressure is adequate for temperature changes. Does anyone assume commercial bus drivers  adjust tire air pressure as they drive from CA to WY in December?

For RossBoyer; The NHTSA (another link) says to inflate to the Federal Tire Placard in the vehicle, that's what i do for all my vehicles. What do you do for your autos when you are the only occupant vs having 4 passengers, do you adjust tire pressure to the load ?

Edited by rayin

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I agree with Richard and it can be a catch 22 question.  If I have in the 30's temps and we're going to our other house in South Texas, I don't adjust my PSI, it's 20-30 degrees warmer where we go and it's a 5 hour trip.  If we go the 250 miles north to Dallas, then I will add air!  

The caveat is how big & how much does your coach weigh for travel to begin with?  Mine is over 64,000#...way more than Ross or Ray!  Tires are also bigger, 365 front and the other 6 are 315's!  Full fuel is 200 gallons...that's variable weight, but fresh water at 140 gallons is not.

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1 hour ago, manholt said:

RayIN, you got a point, but a rougher ride!

IMO that is the whole point of operating ties with lower pressure per tire load/inflation charts,to simply attempt to obtain a smoother ride. BTW Goodyear says that is futile even though they provide load/inflation charts to prevent under-inflation. I wonder if anyone runs lower pressure in their auto tires simply to obtain a smoother ride?

Edited by rayin

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2 hours ago, rossboyer said:

The placard is not necessarily the proper pressure based on actual weight. Weigh, check charts for your tires, inflate while cold to the pressure you found on the chart. Two manufacturers have told me to add ten pounds for safety. 

That adding 10# is to prevent running your tires at 100% capacity; no safety margin.

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2 hours ago, rayin said:

Look at the placard in your bus. The listed air pressure is adequate for temperature changes. Does anyone assume commercial bus drivers  adjust tire air pressure as they drive from CA to WY in December?

For RossBoyer; The NHTSA (another link) says to inflate to the Federal Tire Placard in the vehicle, that's what i do for all my vehicles. What do you do for your autos when you are the only occupant vs having 4 passengers, do you adjust tire pressure to the load ?

If I did the Federal recommendation, I would be grossly under inflated for the actual weight when I had all 4 corners weighed. In 25 years the only tire problem I have had was a bad valve stem. You do what you want, but I would rather be safe. 

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9 hours ago, rayin said:

...I wonder if anyone runs lower pressure in their auto tires simply to obtain a smoother ride?

Yes

Within the margin allowed by the tire manufacturer, but many luxury cars have achieved their soft ride by running the pressure at the lower end of the acceptable pressure range. Those manufacturers interested in fuel economy tend to inflate towards the upper end of the range, comfort the lower. With modern suspension systems this is not as common, but it's been a practice of manufacturers for a long time.

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Yes - there was a problem with the tires on the Ford Explorer from those years. Not the only tire problem that's happened over the years.

However, the exception doesn't make the rule. Auto manufacturers have used tire pressures to balance comfort and economy since the early years of the auto industry. The problem with tires on the Explorer aside, the answer to the question is still 'yes', lower tire pressures are used for a smoother ride in cars.

Rarely will the recommended tire pressure for a car be the sidewall max.

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For about 18 years, I ran my coach tires at sidewall PSI, weight of coach for travel?  Who knew?  Weight and Temp was not part of the equation, since we all ran non steel belted, Radial tires!  TPM did not exist, so at every fuel stop/rest area, we would "Thump" the inner drive tires!  I still do that once a day!  I ran Kelly's back then!

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Ross I don't understand??? The Tire placard lists the front and rear axle GAWR and the corresponding tire pressure. How will doing that cause an under-inflation scenario unless the MH is overweight?

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Maybe the Tireman will explain. I gave tried. You do what you want. I will do what is recommended for my corner weighs and tire chart from the manufacturer of my tires. Enough said. 

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Ross, Tireman has on numerous posts!  Since the invention of TPS and coaches running Radial Steel Belted tires, we know what caused all the blow outs on older models.  In Texas, during summer, you do not want to run at max cold.  My chart say's 115 psi front cold and 100 on rear drive and tag, cold. I use a 7% +/- during winter and no +, only - in Summer!

Edited by manholt

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On 11/16/2020 at 8:53 PM, rayin said:

IMO that is the whole point of operating ties with lower pressure per tire load/inflation charts,to simply attempt to obtain a smoother ride. BTW Goodyear says that is futile even though they provide load/inflation charts to prevent under-inflation. I wonder if anyone runs lower pressure in their auto tires simply to obtain a smoother ride?

Curious why you think that there is no downside to running at a higher pressure than necessary? It's not just a smoother ride - there is a negative effect on handling and braking when running higher-than-necessary air pressure.

Also, the information on the Federal placard is static and often just represents one possible setup available on the chassis. If I were to follow the information on my Federal placard I'd still be running bias-belted tires and an air pressure way out of line with what I run in the current tires. The Federal placard on my coach presents the max load with the standard OEM tires. The operator's manual on my coach has about 4 pages of load & inflation tables which give detailed information for the available tire and wheel options.

This has long been a more complex calculation than just looking at the Federal placard.

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RayIN.  Yes, I run a lower tire pressure when I'm off roading in the desert and mountains.  My Jeep tires hold 40 psi max cold, I run in the 12 psi to 20 psi depending on terrain!  When I get to pavement, I air up to 35 hot.

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I completely agree Carl. I asked about carrying 4 passengers in a car compared to only the driver. That weight difference is substantial yet no-one I know adjusts car tire pressure for the corresponding load. That is exactly the same situation many MH owners quote when following load/inflation charts, never mind the fact the charts are showing the minimum pressure for the corresponding load. I'd bet money commercial bus drivers nor bus line owners follow load/inflation charts.

Hey, this had been beaten to death-so to speak. Like Ross said time to quit before hard feelings between internet friends happen..

 I wish everyone a healthy and happy Thanksgiving or what they observe!

Edited by rayin

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1 hour ago, rayin said:

... I asked about carrying 4 passengers in a car compared to only the driver. That weight difference is substantial yet no-one I know adjusts car tire pressure for the corresponding load. ...

Funny - I can remember my father trying to do the math when we loaded up the family's station wagon for our annual trip to the Catskills from NJ. He tried his best using a bathroom scale to adjust the tire pressure according to the sticker on the doorpost based on how much we were carrying. Maybe that's where I get it from.

Of course, that station wagon had Firestone 500s on it so we were doomed to have problems regardless. And we did. Rear blowout on an elevated section of Rt. 22 heading into NYC. Yours truly was the designated tire monkey, even though it took standing with all my body weight on the jack handle/lug wrench to break them free when I was a kid. Ah, the good ole days.

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