Originally Posted By: antiqueshell
Originally Posted By: Doog
Placard on door plus 2psi. The Firestone guy is a moron.
x eleventy billion!
If you run nearly max pressure with the standard tire sizes you will probably destroy the suspension in short order, and your teeth will likely be shaken out of your head too. Not only that you actually will greatly increase tread wear towards the center of the tire tread.
As far as aftermarket tire and wheel sizes, you usually go thinner profile and wider so in effect the pressures would stay about the same for up to +2 I would guess.
No. Inflating your tires to their max pressure will NOT destroy the suspension and will not knock your teeth around. However the ride is firmer.
I can't agree with your wear estimate, and have found the opposite to be true -- for years I ran the placarded pressure and usually ended up with worn outer edges of tires and not much wear in the center.
Can we all agree that a properly inflated tire will show even wear across the entire tread? If so, then choosing an arbitrary number listed on the door panel or anywhere else isn't correct -- everyone's saying use this or that number but I didn't see any real world testing. You've got to play around with it to get the proper pressure for your vehicle.
For my last 8 vehicles (the 2 in the sig, 2008 Nissan Versa, 2000 Grand Cherokee, 2004 Dodge truck, 1986 Mercury, 1996 Jeep Wrangler, 1993 Ford Crown Vic) I have found that inflating the tires to their maximum value provided even wear across the tread. For some of the vehicles,there was excessive wear on the edges. For NO vehicle was there more wear on the center of the tire.
In each case, the inflation pressure was a good bit higher than the placard on the door frame. Manufacturers often placard a tire pressure that give the best ride...a firm ride isn't what Mr. Old Guy wants in his car, he wants it cushy and may not care about tire wear.
For me, the history I have over the last 300,000 miles of driving the vehicles listed above shows pretty conclusively that a higher pressure gives more even wear. Finally, in those miles I experienced exactly ZERO suspension issues.