Tire pressure is important!
#71
Re: Tire pressure is important!
But remember....NITROGEN doesn't leak out of tires cause its "better"
#73
Re: Tire pressure is important!
haha. I think that nitrogen is the biggest scam since bottled water.
#74
Is it safe?
The other day I pumped up my Continental Eco Trac tires (original stock tires) to 35 PSI. I noticed that the placard on the door jamb indicated called for 35 PSI, but the sidewall writing on the tires themselves called for max 30 PSI. (They were at 30 from the dealer).
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
#75
Re: Is it safe?
The other day I pumped up my Continental Eco Trac tires (original stock tires) to 35 PSI. I noticed that the placard on the door jamb indicated called for 35 PSI, but the sidewall writing on the tires themselves called for max 30 PSI. (They were at 30 from the dealer).
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
#76
Re: Is it safe?
I think you either got the wrong tires installed, or mis-read something.
On the tires it should say 44 psi Max.
On the placard on the car, it should say 35psi.
I talked to Ford and the acceptible range for the tires is 25psi to 44psi.
Ford recommends 35 psi as a "middle ground" a compromise of both comfort and performance.
25psi is safe ( just barely ) and will give you softer comfort, but poor performance and shortened tire life.
44psi is safe and will give you better performance, and longer lifespan of the tire, but you will feel a bumpier ride.
Tires will not blow out from pressure until you are over 100psi.
Tires always blow out from damage, not the actual air pressure.
-John
On the tires it should say 44 psi Max.
On the placard on the car, it should say 35psi.
I talked to Ford and the acceptible range for the tires is 25psi to 44psi.
Ford recommends 35 psi as a "middle ground" a compromise of both comfort and performance.
25psi is safe ( just barely ) and will give you softer comfort, but poor performance and shortened tire life.
44psi is safe and will give you better performance, and longer lifespan of the tire, but you will feel a bumpier ride.
Tires will not blow out from pressure until you are over 100psi.
Tires always blow out from damage, not the actual air pressure.
-John
The other day I pumped up my Continental Eco Trac tires (original stock tires) to 35 PSI. I noticed that the placard on the door jamb indicated called for 35 PSI, but the sidewall writing on the tires themselves called for max 30 PSI. (They were at 30 from the dealer).
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
I'm a little worried that I could be setting myself up for a blow-out riding on 35 PSI. Is it really OK to use this pressure?
#77
Re: Tire pressure is important!
I noticed if you're willing to put a 225/75-16 tire (only .1" taller than the stock 235/70-16) on a FEH, you can get commericial truck tires that are rated for 80psi. These should have a pretty good LRR effect. I'm curious if anybody has tried this?
#79
Re: Is it safe?
If you are driving on the sand dunes, they recommend dropping your pressure way down. (just remember to pump them back up before you hit the highway)
On the over 100 PSI, I would have had to disagree several years ago when a "standard" tire blew out the side wall on my Blazer at around 35 PSI after just filling it at the station, dang I hated those "standard" tires.
Not as bad as the re-treads that were on a GMC pickup, one let loose and about 1/3 stayed on the tire becoming a wipping strip damaging the fender, wheel well & running board
Ahh, how I don't miss the 80's some daze!
#80
Re: Tire pressure is important!
Maybe someone really seeking LRR would use a 15" tire like other Escapes do.
Your local retailer may not stock these tires, but from past experience ordering is quick and relatively painless.
Last edited by D-mac; 12-27-2007 at 03:01 PM.