My car and trailer weigh about 4500 lbs. The trailer has ST205/75 D 14 tires. Max pressure says 50psi.
What's a good psi, and how is it determined?
What's a good psi, and how is it determined?
Tail wagging the dog. Many trailer owners manuals have reccomended tire pressure.some are on a decal right above the wheel as well as wheel nut torque. But that makes it too easy.I can tell you for a fact, I went and had new tires put on our camper, and the tire shop put them at max inflation.
You could not hold that trailer on the road, it swayed so bad, my wife was behind me and said what is wrong with trailer.
It was white knuckle driving for a few mile until I pulled over and let some air out of the tires.
A lot of it depends on the tire. True trailer tires should be run at max inflation when loaded. Often times, passenger vehicle tires are used on some trailers and the rules become different. You are also talking about a camper rather than a car trailer so your application adds to the equation.I can tell you for a fact, I went and had new tires put on our camper, and the tire shop put them at max inflation.
You could not hold that trailer on the road, it swayed so bad, my wife was behind me and said what is wrong with trailer.
It was white knuckle driving for a few mile until I pulled over and let some air out of the tires.
10 psi per ply. for trailer tires. I have pulled countless trailers, some grossly overloaded. If you want best service, minimal blowouts, 10 psi per ply and don't speed! Over 60 MPH with trailer tires is speeding. But why listen to me.......If you want the true answer, 10 PSI per PLY. 10 ply rating, 100 PSI. 6 ply rating, 60.......You will never go wrong with this formula. TRAILER Tires.

I`ve always tried to run 75 to a 100 pounds tongue weight on car trailers (open type), and 50 to 70- on a long ATV trailer. And a short wheel base p/u will be a lot easier to back than a long 4 door or quadcab, but won`t handle the weight as good. I only live about 9 miles from our dragstrip, so a short bed standard cab is better for me.10 psi per ply. for trailer tires. I have pulled countless trailers, some grossly overloaded. If you want best service, minimal blowouts, 10 psi per ply and don't speed! Over 60 MPH with trailer tires is speeding. But why listen to me.......![]()
Standard valve stems don't like 50 psi which are pretty common in a 14" trailer wheel assembly. Have lost more tires from valve stems failing then from a little bit of under or over inflation even running at less psi.My car and trailer weigh about 4500 lbs. The trailer has ST205/75 D 14 tires. Max pressure says 50psi.
What's a good psi, and how is it determined?
FWIW.... I almost agree with that for the cheaper bias ply trailer tires. But running newer radial trailer tires, we run 70-80 for 500 miles at a crack and never a single tire problem in almost a quarter of a million miles in the last 11-12 years.10 psi per ply. for trailer tires. I have pulled countless trailers, some grossly overloaded. If you want best service, minimal blowouts, 10 psi per ply and don't speed! Over 60 MPH with trailer tires is speeding. But why listen to me.......![]()
-The tire says max 50, so I stopped there.10 psi per ply. for trailer tires. I have pulled countless trailers, some grossly overloaded. If you want best service, minimal blowouts, 10 psi per ply and don't speed! Over 60 MPH with trailer tires is speeding. But why listen to me.......![]()
In my research over the summer, I read that LT tires are for just that, light trucks. I wish I could remember the details, but it makes sense. If I somehow wreck, I don't want the insurance companies seeing LT's on it.I seem to remember reading here a while ago that some members run light truck tires on their trailer
The trailer mfg. installed the valve stems. They look standard to me. The trailer mfg. also recommends 50 psi. I hope you're wrong! What would be a good alternative?Standard valve stems don't like 50 psi which are pretty common in a 14" trailer wheel assembly. Have lost more tires from valve stems failing then from a little bit of under or over inflation even running at less psi.