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-   -   Nismo Tire Pressure (http://www.the370z.com/nismo-370z/27550-nismo-tire-pressure.html)

Pelican170 11-09-2010 08:43 AM

Nismo Tire Pressure
 
Hey Guys,

I happened to check my tire pressure this morning and the guage said my fronts were at 30 psi. I know the max. for these is 50 psi. Was curious if everyone fills them up to 50 or under?

ChrisSlicks 11-09-2010 08:50 AM

The tire max is 50, but the manufacturer recommended cold pressure is 35. If you filled them to 50 you would be very unhappy with ride and handling.

fuct 11-09-2010 09:09 AM

i concur 35 cold...

Dpeters 11-09-2010 10:02 AM

I get beat up as it is in my Nismo... I couldn't imagine having the tire pressure at 50.

I would also venture that a psi of 50 would create a less than flat tire surface, thus removing traction from the Z and causing inconsistant wear. You'd certainly burn your tires up at the line with over inflated tire pressure.

Trips 11-09-2010 10:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChrisSlicks (Post 802448)
The tire max is 50, but the manufacturer recommended cold pressure is 35. If you filled them to 50 you would be very unhappy with ride and handling.

Quote:

Originally Posted by fuct (Post 802458)
i concur 35 cold...

I agree :tiphat:

Pelican170 11-09-2010 01:46 PM

Yea thanks guys. Found the manufacturer's recommendation on the door jam. 35 it is... I also think the tire pressure guage I just bought is crappy because the gas stations showed about 36, which is fine...

ChrisSlicks 11-09-2010 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pelican170 (Post 802873)
Yea thanks guys. Found the manufacturer's recommendation on the door jam. 35 it is... I also think the tire pressure guage I just bought is crappy because the gas stations showed about 36, which is fine...

The gas station pressure gauges are almost always wrong, nice cheap digital gauge is the way to go.

FERRARI 11-09-2010 02:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pelican170 (Post 802873)
Yea thanks guys. Found the manufacturer's recommendation on the door jam. 35 it is... I also think the tire pressure guage I just bought is crappy because the gas stations showed about 36, which is fine...

This can be found on a sticker in the driver's door sill area

fuct 11-09-2010 03:09 PM

ALSO NEVER GET AIR AT A GAS STATION!!!! there is water mixed in with that line. just spray air and you will see water come out too!

ChrisSlicks 11-09-2010 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fuct (Post 803066)
ALSO NEVER GET AIR AT A GAS STATION!!!! there is water mixed in with that line. just spray air and you will see water come out too!

If they have a large air tank you are fine, the water separates from the air when highly compressed. If they use a small noisy compressor stay away.

nabenson 11-17-2010 06:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fuct (Post 803066)
ALSO NEVER GET AIR AT A GAS STATION!!!! there is water mixed in with that line. just spray air and you will see water come out too!

Also, by the time you get to the gas station your tires will probably warm up enough to gain a couple of lbs of air..

FERRARI 11-17-2010 06:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nabenson (Post 813383)
Also, by the time you get to the gas station your tires will probably warm up enough to gain a couple of lbs of air..


So....just add 2 or 3 pounds extra....go home let cool off for 4 to 5 hours.....drain the water out......and let out air to the desired pressure...

crash1369 11-17-2010 08:51 PM

Your question has been answered already but to elaborate, if your interested. As long as your running OEM sized/ load rating tires (or close to it) you will want to stay with the recommended pressure on the door (or close to it) as that should provide optimal tire wear and gas mileage. If you were to make a drastic size change that pressure would no long apply, but you never want to use the Maximum pressure, unless you are at the maximum load for the tire in question. Which you would also probably want to avoid.

Lower Tire pressure, within reason, can give you better traction. Obviously there is a limit though, Probably a few PSI. If the pressure is to low it can cause the tires to over heat and fail, as well as uneven tire wear. The outsides would wear out faster becuase the center is not firmly on the ground.

Higher pressures will decrease rolling resistance and can actually help gas mileage (allot of OEMs spec their pressure a little high these days for that reason) but at the cost of traction. If the pressure is to high less of the tire is contacting the road which makes it roll more easily but since only the center is in contact you have less traction and obviously uneven tire wear.

As mentioned the tire pressure will also affect the ride characteristics of the car since the pressure in the tire determines it's stiffness and in turn how much impact it absorbs. I do not recommend adjsuting tire pressure to compensate for ride quality, that's what the suspension is for, but it does make a noticable difference.

If you're not sure what your tire pressure should be, or curious if you really have it just right an easy way to determine what it should be is to draw a line across the tread with chalk. Drive a short distance until the chalk starts to wear off and see if it's even. Again if just the center wears off your pressure is a little high try letting a pound out, or vise-verse. It's easiest to knowingly overfill them a bit for this test so you can just let the air out until you get where you want to be rather then trying to fill them in tiny increments.
If you really want to get crazy/ exact you can use an infrared thermometer and adjust the pressure until the tires temperature is consistent across the tread surface.

To much information yet? :rofl2:

FERRARI 11-17-2010 10:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by crash1369 (Post 813605)
Your question has been answered already but to elaborate, if your interested. As long as your running OEM sized/ load rating tires (or close to it) you will want to stay with the recommended pressure on the door (or close to it) as that should provide optimal tire wear and gas mileage. If you were to make a drastic size change that pressure would no long apply, but you never want to use the Maximum pressure, unless you are at the maximum load for the tire in question. Which you would also probably want to avoid.

Lower Tire pressure, within reason, can give you better traction. Obviously there is a limit though, Probably a few PSI. If the pressure is to low it can cause the tires to over heat and fail, as well as uneven tire wear. The outsides would wear out faster becuase the center is not firmly on the ground.

Higher pressures will decrease rolling resistance and can actually help gas mileage (allot of OEMs spec their pressure a little high these days for that reason) but at the cost of traction. If the pressure is to high less of the tire is contacting the road which makes it roll more easily but since only the center is in contact you have less traction and obviously uneven tire wear.

As mentioned the tire pressure will also affect the ride characteristics of the car since the pressure in the tire determines it's stiffness and in turn how much impact it absorbs. I do not recommend adjsuting tire pressure to compensate for ride quality, that's what the suspension is for, but it does make a noticable difference.

If you're not sure what your tire pressure should be, or curious if you really have it just right an easy way to determine what it should be is to draw a line across the tread with chalk. Drive a short distance until the chalk starts to wear off and see if it's even. Again if just the center wears off your pressure is a little high try letting a pound out, or vise-verse. It's easiest to knowingly overfill them a bit for this test so you can just let the air out until you get where you want to be rather then trying to fill them in tiny increments.
If you really want to get crazy/ exact you can use an infrared thermometer and adjust the pressure until the tires temperature is consistent across the tread surface.

To much information yet? :rofl2:



good post +1

crash1369 11-17-2010 10:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FERRARI (Post 813692)
good post +1

Thanks :tup:


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