Tire Pressure Inflation - what is too much?
https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tirete...e.jsp?techid=1
Disadvantages of Overinflation An overinflated tire is stiff and unyielding and the size of its footprint in contact with the road is reduced. If a vehicle's tires are overinflated by 6 psi, they could be damaged more easily when encountering potholes or debris in the road, as well as experience irregular tread wear. Higher inflated tires cannot isolate road irregularities as well causing the vehicle to ride harsher and transmit more noise into its interior. However, higher inflation pressures reduce rolling resistance slightly and typically provide a slight improvement in steering response and cornering stability. This is why participants who use street tires in autocrosses, track events and road races run higher than normal inflation pressures. Disadvantages of Underinflation An underinflated tire can't maintain its shape and becomes flatter than intended while in contact with the road. If a vehicle's tires are underinflated by only 6 psi it could weaken the tire's internal structure and eventually lead to tire failure. Lower inflation pressures will allow more deflection as the tire rolls. This will build up more internal heat, increase rolling resistance (causing a reduction in fuel economy of up to 5%) and reduce the tire's tread life by as much as 25% while increasing the probability of irregular treadwear. Drivers would also find a noteworthy loss of steering precision and cornering stability. While 6 psi doesn't seem excessively low, it typically represents about 20% of a passenger car tire's recommended pressure. Advantages of Correct Tire Inflation Maintaining correct tire inflation pressure helps optimize tire performance and fuel economy. Correct tire inflation pressure allows drivers to experience tire comfort, durability and performance designed to match the needs of their vehicles. Tire deflection (the tread and sidewall flexing where the tread comes into contact with the road) will remain as originally designed and excessive sidewall flexing and tread squirm will be avoided. Heat buildup will be managed and rolling resistance will be appropriate. Proper tire inflation pressure also stabilizes the tire's structure, blending the tire's responsiveness, traction and handling. |
I have to disagree with the claim of irregular wear patterns. I've had tires inflated to 60 psi for 10's of thousands of miles with no irregular wear patterns showing up. I know of a guy in northern IL that has ~85K miles on the stock tires that came with his '05 Accord that seem to have several K miles left on them.
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Read this thread.
https://www.gassavers.org/showthread.php?t=803 |
I've been running 60 psi on the word of a few fuel economy minded drivers ;)
It goes against what we've been told and how we've been taught to maintain our vehicles- BUT it works . I've been checking the tires at least 3 times per week (pressure and tread depth with a rotation every 3500 mi) and am now at 8k miles with no discernable treadware issues. I had a really large bump in mpg at @ 55-60 psi - so thats where I run em . as always, ymmv |
Yeah, I read that article. Pretty nutz. What about my front tires. The sidewall is 35. You think I do 45? I think right now they're at 39. I'm gonna put my rears up to 50. They are max rated to 44.
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1993CivicVX -
Here is a conservative source : The wheel and tyre Bible https://www.carbibles.com/tyre_bible.html The Max. Pressure -10% theory. https://www.carbibles.com/tyre_bible_pg2.html Quote:
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Cyclists probably think about this more than any of you guys would ever need to. Different PSI for a road race verses a time trial or wet vs dry. Usually it is only inexperienced time trialers or triathletes that overinflate. For cycling tyres, the adhesion is a function of contact time and overinflated tyres can bounce loose of contact easier. That takes a lot of skin off your body - they shave their legs for a reason.
At some point the handling of any overinflated tyre will degrade. I would never exceed the maximum sidewall pressure. I'll respect the legal opinion of the tyre manufacturer on what the max should be and my insurance company shouldn't be able to find any issues with that. |
Cyclist's tires also aren't radially belted -- the handling change is very different as the bias threading allows the tire/tube to balloon :/
For a TT on an unknown track, that makes sense given that it's easier to catch a bump, loft/break traction and bad things come of that.... I've read about the speed/challenge distance guys over inflating the hell out of their tires - especially on a velodrome track -- but I'm talking about the 60+mph cyclists :p It's also been suggested to shave down rubber tread for shorter use/higher speed runs o.0 |
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