Originally Posted by CapriRacer
What this all means is that S and T rated tires can have 35, 44 or 51 psi listed as the max pressure, and it is relatively arbitrary which of those 3 is chosen - that is, the tire's construction is NOT specifically designed around that pressure - AND - there aren't any vehicle manufacturers who specify pressures for their vehicles higher than 35 psi (36 psi for metric tires), with some notable exceptions.
Exceptions? German based vehicle manufacturers who specify H or higher speed rated tires, because Germany has the Autobahn with no speed limit, so the vehicle MUST be designed for that and that means the tires have to be capable of handling the top speed of the vehicle - hence the higher specified pressure for THAT condition. However even those vehicles don't specify that higher pressure for normal use.
Why would a H tire (sidewall max 51 psi) that is rated at 210 km/h speed is being recommended by German vehicle manufacturer having a vehicle top speed of 260 km/h ?
Is H metric tyre with rated speed of 210 km/h to be interpreted as a minimum speed, and not maximum speed allowable ? ...... and hence permitted by tire manufacturer (or is it Standards Organisation ?) for use in vehicle approaching top speed of 260 km/h.
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Where all this leads to confusion is that H and higher speed rated tires (The ones that MUST have 44 or 51 psi max pressures!) must also have constructions capable of passing their respective speed rating tests - and many folks interpret that to mean the tire is designed for the higher pressure and that's not accurate. More accurate is that the tire is designed to pass the speed rating test and the construction reflects that.
So I call the pressure listed on the vehicle tire placard as a "Specification" - sort of like the oil viscosity is specified for the engine. You can do something different, but you have to be aware that the vehicle manufacturer doesn't endorse it.
Let's say 35 psi (36 psi for metric tires) was recommended by vehicle manufacturer , endorsement would likely not apply for 34 psi and below, right ?
Hence vehicle manufacturer endorses 35 psi and higher , not exceeding sidewall maximum pressure of 51 psi , am I right in saying so ?