milkman636
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,482
- Location
- Palm of the Right Hand
- Tractor
- Bobcat CT335 + John Deere 1023e (former owner of Kubota BX2370-1, John Deere 5210, and Ford 2000)
...............I also find it a bit funny that people say you should never trust the manufacturer of the vehicle to know what they are talking about because of one bad example. I would hazard a guess that because of the liability involved, most of the time, the vehicle manufacturer is going to recommend a pressure that is well above a range that would endanger the tire and thus the car, and then lead to a lawsuit - again.
Just my 2.1「.
Dave
Its not about trusting them. Its just that the manufacturers have to pick a single compromise number for tire inflation that suits every operating condition that your truck will experience within its design parameters. They have hours of meeting where groups of engineers discuss why their number is the best. Then they settle on a compromsied specific number. That's one of the reasons new vehicles cost so much. We simple minded:confused2: owners can't be trusted to make our own judgements about loading and tire pressures.