Author Topic: Radial Tire Inflation  (Read 1820 times)

Cortes121

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Radial Tire Inflation
« on: April 22, 2011, 06:08:48 PM »
I was wondering with 205/70 R15 radial tires what I should inflate them to. I know the manual has a reccomended tire pressure but that is for Bias Plys. Should I just fill each tire to its max capacity?

- Anthony

1951 Kaiser Deluxe
1955 Packard Clipper Custom

HJ-ETEX

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Re: Radial Tire Inflation
« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2011, 07:28:26 PM »
Start by using the tire's recommended PSI which will probably be around 32. After you drive for a while, drop down to 28 and see if you like it better. If you recall the Ford Explorer/Firestone tire debacle, Ford got to the point of recommending 24 PSI on those tires - and Firestone disagreed. Porsches and Corvairs are touchy about tire pressures but that comes from a large % of the cars weight at the back and an exotic suspension. HJs shouldn't need such attention to tire pressure.
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Cortes121

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Re: Radial Tire Inflation
« Reply #2 on: April 22, 2011, 07:41:53 PM »
I'm sorry I didn't clarify befor,e But this is concerning a 51 Kaiser


but 32 sounds about right. I'm more concerned with tire longevity than comfortability.
- Anthony

1951 Kaiser Deluxe
1955 Packard Clipper Custom

HJ-ETEX

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Re: Radial Tire Inflation
« Reply #3 on: April 22, 2011, 07:48:02 PM »
Well, 205/70PRx15 would be too large for a HJ. I ran 215/70PRx15 on my 51 Kaiser at 32 PSI.
KFOCI VP 2001-2005
1951 Kaiser Deluxe /327 Chevy
1951 Kaiser Deluxe (no funny stuff)
1968 Kaiser Commando V6
1961 Willys 2WD 134 F-Head SW
1963 Kaiser FC170

Cortes121

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Re: Radial Tire Inflation
« Reply #4 on: April 23, 2011, 08:14:51 PM »
I will definitely try 32, thanks so much.  :)
- Anthony

1951 Kaiser Deluxe
1955 Packard Clipper Custom

Jim B PEI

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Re: Radial Tire Inflation
« Reply #5 on: April 24, 2011, 03:59:07 PM »
Depending on the radial tire construction, some have even higher available pressures with no degradation in ride. Some of the newest "eco" type tires are way higher. Base it on the range suggested by the manufacturer--but there is a lot of wiggle room. I drive a VW diesel wagon as a DD, and it is usually loaded, and runs at higher speeds, so I run at 36 front and 41 rear which is the suggested pressure for loaded higher speeds; the usual pressure for regular driving is about 32. The tires deliver a smooth ride and last a long time even at these higher pressures.

Running on lower pressure to get a better ride on any vehicle is dangerous, as above, the "Ford Exploder" syndrome. If the ride is too harsh, then perhaps a different brand will run smoother.
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