What psi? - That is the question
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What psi? - That is the question
Thought i should bring this here instead of hijacking another topic.
Quick Fit told me to put 40psi in the front and 38psi in the back of my
205x40x17 tyres.
'LM' agrees as he does 40psi all round and 'Miata' disagrees with back-up from Bridgestone website...
What psi do each of have in ur tyres? And why's that??
Quick Fit told me to put 40psi in the front and 38psi in the back of my
205x40x17 tyres.
'LM' agrees as he does 40psi all round and 'Miata' disagrees with back-up from Bridgestone website...
What psi do each of have in ur tyres? And why's that??
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I use to run my 17"s about 40-42, i guess because the profile was pretty low i was paranoid about the sidewall flexing too much and hitting the rim.
I ended up chewing up the insides of my tyres in the process.
Take a look along the inside edge might be a good sign your running too much pressure.
Another solution is the mark your tyres with some chalk, lower the HOT psi temp by say 2psi each time until you find a happy medium.
I ended up chewing up the insides of my tyres in the process.
Take a look along the inside edge might be a good sign your running too much pressure.
Another solution is the mark your tyres with some chalk, lower the HOT psi temp by say 2psi each time until you find a happy medium.
If you had access to a car like this, would you take it back right away? Neither would I.
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Re: What psi? - That is the question
Mick_98MXV wrote:...Quick Fit told me to put 40psi in the front and 38psi in the back of my 205x40x17 tyres.
Ok i'm confussed.
If you had access to a car like this, would you take it back right away? Neither would I.
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I run 32 psi all round on 205/45/16.
I think 40 is too high and the car will feel skittish, for such a light car. Start with something lower and just monitor the wear and make small changes.
After going for a hard drive on the weekend, the wear is even so I'm sticking with 32. The tyres felt great around bends too.
I think 40 is too high and the car will feel skittish, for such a light car. Start with something lower and just monitor the wear and make small changes.
After going for a hard drive on the weekend, the wear is even so I'm sticking with 32. The tyres felt great around bends too.
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re
i am nowhere near an expert at this sorta thing - but heres my humble contribution anyways...
i run 40pseez in my work car coz it has really ordinary tires, and i want the extra crispness (and economy) but i start @ 26-28 pseez on the track rubber...
bear in mind that for everything there is a cause and effect - running any tires with higher pressure will make them stiffer, but reduce the contact patch on the road, thereby lessening grip.
silly me forgot to adjust pressures @ winton during the rain a few months ago, as the day wore on a dry line appeared, my hot pressures were up around 40psi (optimum for those tyres is low-mid 30s) and i had a really well defined wear mark in the centre third of the tyre. I didnt record any faster time on the dry run with the wrong pressure than i did on the wet runs with the right pressure.
Running asymmetrical pressures (eg 30 front/34 rear) is a good way to subtly change the handling characteristics of your car. i think that most sedans and stuff call for higher pressures in the rear to compensate for the additional weight of rear passengers and luggage etc - things that dont really factor into a -5 drive
fwiw i generally have 2 pseez lower on my drive tyres to give the better compliance/adhesion.
We are all running different pressures - i guess that you can guess that it all comes down to a manufacturer recommendation to start with, then personal preference for the fine tuning! trial and error, my friend. trial and error.
ps has anyone ever put air in their tyres @ a service station (those fancy digital things that they use to stop ppl stealing their air thingy) then gone to a different station and checked the pressures? i did it for a laugh the other week - had pressures ranging from 18psi all round, to 44psi all round. scary! never trust one of them again
i run 40pseez in my work car coz it has really ordinary tires, and i want the extra crispness (and economy) but i start @ 26-28 pseez on the track rubber...
bear in mind that for everything there is a cause and effect - running any tires with higher pressure will make them stiffer, but reduce the contact patch on the road, thereby lessening grip.
silly me forgot to adjust pressures @ winton during the rain a few months ago, as the day wore on a dry line appeared, my hot pressures were up around 40psi (optimum for those tyres is low-mid 30s) and i had a really well defined wear mark in the centre third of the tyre. I didnt record any faster time on the dry run with the wrong pressure than i did on the wet runs with the right pressure.
Running asymmetrical pressures (eg 30 front/34 rear) is a good way to subtly change the handling characteristics of your car. i think that most sedans and stuff call for higher pressures in the rear to compensate for the additional weight of rear passengers and luggage etc - things that dont really factor into a -5 drive
fwiw i generally have 2 pseez lower on my drive tyres to give the better compliance/adhesion.
We are all running different pressures - i guess that you can guess that it all comes down to a manufacturer recommendation to start with, then personal preference for the fine tuning! trial and error, my friend. trial and error.
ps has anyone ever put air in their tyres @ a service station (those fancy digital things that they use to stop ppl stealing their air thingy) then gone to a different station and checked the pressures? i did it for a laugh the other week - had pressures ranging from 18psi all round, to 44psi all round. scary! never trust one of them again
2013 Australian hillclimb champion 2F
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2013 qld hillclimb champion 2F
Qld & Aus 2F state record holder-mt cotton
2014 vic hillclimb champion - 2A
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