3rd Gen RAM general discussion/NON-tech This section is for general discussions about your 3rd gen RAM. Non tech related RAM threads belong here.

Tire pressure question....

Old Mar 20, 2011 | 01:07 PM
  #11  
bigdaddyII's Avatar
bigdaddyII
Thread Starter
|
Captain
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 538
Likes: 0
From: Southern Louisiana
Default

Its an A/T tire. The only other tire i have ever seen with a 35 psi max is Fords OEM Hankooks.
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 03:08 PM
  #12  
HammerZ71's Avatar
HammerZ71
Administrator
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 24,686
Likes: 21
From: South Georgia/East Florida
Default

I was actually a little surprised when I got my Terra Grapples for my Grand Cherokee. All the guys I know with them on trucks have like 50 PSI max on theirs, but then again, they have the truck models and not the passenger car model like I put on my Grand Cherokee.

If I'm not mistaken, the P-rated Toyo Open Country A/Ts are 35 PSI also...
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 03:51 PM
  #13  
bigdaddyII's Avatar
bigdaddyII
Thread Starter
|
Captain
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 538
Likes: 0
From: Southern Louisiana
Default

I was surprised as well. I felt lost, not knowing what to do lol. I emailed Nitto about it and will see what they have to say. Also when I stopped for gas last night after traveling approx 100 miles, I felt the tread of the tire and it was quite warm. I dont know if this is normal or not as I have never went around feeling the tread on tires before, for now I am just assuming the extra heat due to the tires breaking in. I ran the at 35 psi cold (actually 75 degrees at the time), and they seemed to handle the 520 miles up here without any problems.

As an odd side note, I looked at the door jamb sticker on my truck and the tire size listed there is P245/70/17 and on my build sheet it says the truck came with P265/70/17, which is what was on it when I bought it. Weird.......
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 05:54 PM
  #14  
HammerZ71's Avatar
HammerZ71
Administrator
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 24,686
Likes: 21
From: South Georgia/East Florida
Default

Personally, I'd only really go by the door sticker if I had a comparable tire to stock. Same size, ply and load rating.

I have "D" load, 35" tires on my truck that have a max of 50 PSI and if I ran them at the 35 PSI that the sticker says they would handle like sh*t, get **** poor mileage and not last worth a lick. Imagine if I put "E" tires on it with a max of 80 PSI.
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 10:34 PM
  #15  
bigdaddyII's Avatar
bigdaddyII
Thread Starter
|
Captain
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 538
Likes: 0
From: Southern Louisiana
Default

On a previous truck I had D range A/T KOs, and the max on those was 65 psi. Wonder what Nitto is doing to be able to obtain similar load rating with lower PSI.
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 10:55 PM
  #16  
HammerZ71's Avatar
HammerZ71
Administrator
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 24,686
Likes: 21
From: South Georgia/East Florida
Default

The tires on my truck are Cepeks, all Cepek and Mickey Thompson "D" tires are 50 PSI. Higher ply rating than A/T KO's. Thicker carcass means less air needed...
 
Reply
Old Mar 20, 2011 | 11:42 PM
  #17  
bigdaddyII's Avatar
bigdaddyII
Thread Starter
|
Captain
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 538
Likes: 0
From: Southern Louisiana
Default

Ah okay. I knew that you had Cepeks too, just not thinking too clearly here lately.
 
Reply
Old Mar 23, 2011 | 11:01 AM
  #18  
bigdaddyII's Avatar
bigdaddyII
Thread Starter
|
Captain
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 538
Likes: 0
From: Southern Louisiana
Default

Okay, I just got off the phone with Nitto, and they assure me that the tire will be fine running at its max psi (35) because thats the door sticker recommended. In a way I knew he would resort back to that, but did tell me that if I were to run D or E rated tires the proper inflation for normal driving (not loaded) would be 45 psi. I will run these at 35 psi and moniter wear, as I am more concerned with tire failure from too little air then too much.
 
Reply


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:05 PM.