The Grenadier Forum
Register Now for enhanced site access.
INEOS Agents, Dealers or Commercial vendors please contact admin@theineosforum.com for a commercial account.

Tire pressure nonsense

wolftimj

Grenadier Owner
Local time
12:32 PM
Joined
Sep 27, 2023
Messages
101
Reaction score
98
Location
Rockwall, TX, USA
I just switched out the 255-70-18 KO2s that I got with my rig for 285/75-17 HD-Terrains on AO XT rims. Got rubber at Costco and had them swap the original TPMS into the new tires in same position. Worked well. The nonsense part, maybe; they said since they are E load range while originals were D so I needed to run higher pressures. I cannot find anything online to confirm this, everything I find says to run at the same 36psi I had before. Anyone think Costco is right?
 

trobex

Grenadier Owner
Local time
5:32 PM
Joined
Dec 23, 2022
Messages
1,817
Reaction score
2,396
Location
Australia
I just switched out the 255-70-18 KO2s that I got with my rig for 285/75-17 HD-Terrains on AO XT rims. Got rubber at Costco and had them swap the original TPMS into the new tires in same position. Worked well. The nonsense part, maybe; they said since they are E load range while originals were D so I needed to run higher pressures. I cannot find anything online to confirm this, everything I find says to run at the same 36psi I had before. Anyone think Costco is right?
... no Cost Co. Run at 36/38psi at ambient or whatever road comfort you desire (below 34psi on asphalt will lead to eventual uneven wear on these larger format rubbers). I have discussed this one before with the guys at Bob Janes. This is general advice only.
 

Dokatd

Grenadier Owner
Local time
11:32 AM
Joined
May 25, 2024
Messages
65
Reaction score
60
Location
Dallas, TX, USA
Costco is definitely wrong, unless you are looking for max load.

For daily driving on my 315/60R17 Goodyear Territory MT’s I run about 30psi. Chalked the tires to set optimum pressures.
 

MurphyMurph

Grenadier Owner
Local time
9:32 AM
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Messages
199
Reaction score
282
Location
Washington, USA
E-rated tires have a stiffer sidewall and are designed to run at higher pressure than D-rated tires. This also means that running at lower pressure won’t cause as much deformation because the sidewall is helping hold the weight of the vehicle instead of air pressure. Running at lower pressure will make it ride smoother, but will increase wear on the shoulder blocks and decrease handling and likely stopping performance.

I change my pressure all the time just to see how it rides. I’m currently at 40psi front and 42psi rear on stock KO2s. I was running 36 psi all around for a while but wanted to help out with fuel economy now that our gas has switched to the higher ethanol content “winter blend”.

Hope that helps!
 

wolftimj

Grenadier Owner
Local time
12:32 PM
Joined
Sep 27, 2023
Messages
101
Reaction score
98
Location
Rockwall, TX, USA
1731605998696.png
 
Local time
12:32 PM
Joined
Apr 28, 2023
Messages
989
Reaction score
867
Location
Pittsburgh
Seems like odd advise. E has a stiffer sidewall and is less likely to deform. although results may vary brand to brand so a direct comparison is really stupid. I'd error on not pissing off the Gren TPMS gods and keep it the same.
 
Local time
9:32 AM
Joined
Jul 31, 2024
Messages
9
Reaction score
17
Location
PNW
Tire pressure is never nonsense. Too many people have no clue what they should be running. FYI, did you know the lowest pressure you should run for E rated tires is 35psi (road pressure, not off road)? There are pressure charts you can use to determine the correct pressure for your tire/ vehicle combination, or you can use the link below to determine the correct pressure (when tires are cold) if you change the size/rating from stock. https://tiresize.com/pressure-calculator/
 

wolftimj

Grenadier Owner
Local time
12:32 PM
Joined
Sep 27, 2023
Messages
101
Reaction score
98
Location
Rockwall, TX, USA
Tire pressure is never nonsense. Too many people have no clue what they should be running. FYI, did you know the lowest pressure you should run for E rated tires is 35psi (road pressure, not off road)? There are pressure charts you can use to determine the correct pressure for your tire/ vehicle combination, or you can use the link below to determine the correct pressure (when tires are cold) if you change the size/rating from stock. https://tiresize.com/pressure-calculator/
That is one of the sites that confirmed what Costco had told me was nonsense.
 
Back
Top Bottom