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Tire pressure question

Discussion in '3rd Gen. Tacomas (2016-2023)' started by D Soulman, Aug 30, 2020.

  1. Aug 30, 2020 at 8:31 PM
    #21
    Marshall R

    Marshall R Well-Known Member

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    The above chart is for heavy duty trucks with a curb weight of 7000+ lbs. and 10,000+ GVWR. You don't need that much air in a 4000 lb. Tacoma with a 5500 lb. GVWR. With 35 PSI in E rated tires you can carry 1800-2200 lbs. per tire. That's 7200-8800 lbs. at 35 PSI. Considering a Tacoma has a payload of around 1200 lbs. and a GVWR of 5500-5600 lbs. there is no need to put more than about 30 PSI in E rated tires on a Tacoma even with payload maxed out. Which is what I keep in my E rated tires.
     
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  2. Aug 31, 2020 at 3:24 PM
    #22
    jadatis

    jadatis Well-Known Member

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    In Europe for every loadrange/ plyrating, of same sise, a seperate list is made, in wich for higher loadrange lower loadcapacity for the same pressure. Wich is the same as higher pressure needed for the same load.
    As European, I always wondered why America gives those listst combined.
    And also the European ETRTO is yust as respected institute as TRA.

    Made a paintpicture to show why.
    So my concusion is even to the other side.segmentexplantiondeflection.jpg
     
    Last edited: Aug 31, 2020
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  3. Aug 31, 2020 at 3:35 PM
    #23
    Junkhead

    Junkhead TRDude

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    I just actually checked the LT tire pressure calculator, and both E and C require 37 psi to carry same weight as tacos stock tire. I was wrong, for some reason i always thought C require couple psi less.

    Edit: thats for p265/65/17 vs LT C Load 265/70/17
     
    Last edited: Aug 31, 2020
  4. Aug 31, 2020 at 3:59 PM
    #24
    2016Tacoman

    2016Tacoman Well-Known Member

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    Clever. Very good.
     
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  5. Aug 31, 2020 at 5:27 PM
    #25
    pltommyo

    pltommyo Well-Known Member

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    I have E-rated BFGs, run 32 street, 20 trails, 12 sand dunes, and up to 45 if pulling a max-load trailer.
     
  6. Aug 31, 2020 at 5:41 PM
    #26
    mutely

    mutely Well-Known Member

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    maths is hard.....:)

    From your posted specs. look at 285/70/17 (Single) vs 275/70/17 (single). (Only change it width), yet the 285 can take same load at less PSI (or more load at same PSI). That confirms first part of that I said accurate.
    Nothing I saw on your graph or PDF Link has the same tire in two different load ratings at same psi it was generic info not tire specific. So the second part of what I said isn’t apparent. Also look at BFGs site, last time I looked they had information where you could directly compare the two, and I just checked again it’s their. Also use any of the inflation techniques posted will also show that since the higher rating tires have less sidewall deflection.
    Those were my main points, width and rating effect load at PSI. Unless you mean the correct way to check appropriately PSI.
     
  7. Aug 31, 2020 at 8:15 PM
    #27
    Mr.Hustler

    Mr.Hustler Well-Known Member

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    It's a secret
    No one got my Fibonacci kPA sequence...it translates to 32.57~ psi...

    No brownie points or Pi slice for anyone!:annoyed::anonymous::burp:
     
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  8. Aug 31, 2020 at 9:59 PM
    #28
    o313

    o313 Well-Known Member

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    This!
     
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  9. Sep 2, 2020 at 6:50 AM
    #29
    pltommyo

    pltommyo Well-Known Member

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    This. My BFG KO2s E-rated like 32 PSI front and 30 PSI rear based upon chalk test. I try to keep them there all year. So far at 45,000 miles on them and still good to use.
     
  10. Sep 3, 2020 at 7:50 AM
    #30
    D Soulman

    D Soulman [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for all the replies guys! I am generally lazy and want the easy answer, but nothing is simple- in my life anyway.. I am playing with the pressure and am now at 37,38 on my C rated 285s and I think I am liking that. I don’t plan to change it for different circumstances unless I really need to (air down for ex). I think I’ve found my own personal sweet spot, although I may try the chalk test if I have time some weekend too just to hopefully confirm my read on it. Thanks again!
     
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  11. Sep 5, 2020 at 3:40 PM
    #31
    Amanhowzit taco

    Amanhowzit taco Well-Known Member

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    265/75/16 tires only everything else stock.
    Since tire pressure is the topic at hand, anyone have any info on why my tire pressure sensor is showing the right passenger side tire is low on air but when I check it with my pressure gage it shows it’s fine at 40 psi. then I check the driver side tire and that’s the tire that’s low. Or leaking at the moment because every week I have to fill it. Thanks
     
  12. Oct 6, 2020 at 11:56 AM
    #32
    cryptolyme

    cryptolyme Well-Known Member

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    i like pie
     
  13. Oct 6, 2020 at 12:04 PM
    #33
    rlx02

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    /thread
     
  14. Oct 6, 2020 at 12:07 PM
    #34
    Sungod

    Sungod Well-Known Member

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    No. No. No. That is the worst suggestion of all time. There is absolutely zero scientific value to rubbing chalk on your tires and is completely a waste of time.
     
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  15. Oct 6, 2020 at 12:30 PM
    #35
    GOTSAND?18

    GOTSAND?18 Well-Known Member

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    This post is from august ....
     
  16. Oct 6, 2020 at 12:40 PM
    #36
    coopcooper

    coopcooper certified youtube mechanic

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    3rd gens must weigh more or some shit cause 37 psi in my truck is a recipe for a spinal injury.
     
  17. Oct 6, 2020 at 12:45 PM
    #37
    Gatordog

    Gatordog Well-Known Member

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    my e rated 33s like 55psi and there is never a dash warning for that amount. The tires are rated to 80psi I believe but with a Tacoma I don't see that psi as a necessity. For what its worth I have tried 35psi on up. To each their own.
     
  18. Oct 6, 2020 at 1:11 PM
    #38
    Amanhowzit taco

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    265/75/16 tires only everything else stock.
    I did but the light came
    On way after I rotated my tires, I also had a nail in the leaky tire that I fixed
     
  19. Oct 6, 2020 at 6:21 PM
    #39
    Amanhowzit taco

    Amanhowzit taco Well-Known Member

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    I did read the manual but I couldn’t find what
    You speak of. I will look again. Thank you kind sir!!
     
  20. Oct 7, 2020 at 4:25 AM
    #40
    Sand_In_My_Taco

    Sand_In_My_Taco Well-Known Member

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    I chalked my Toyo open country MTs (E rated) to around 31-33 in the front, and 28 in the rear.

    Tire shop had them at 50psi, was bouncing all over the freeway.
     
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