Clio 1.2 Grande (2001)
I've been thinking about my tyre pressures in the cage recently. I've got wider than normal tyres on it. 195 instead of 165.
Tyre pressure is such a black art. Some say, always stick with manufactures guidelines regardless of size of tyre. Some say, increase a bit, some say decrease a bit. This guy suggests taking the max allowed pressure for the particular tyre and minus 10% gets you your ideal pressure.
I'm trying it at the moment.
So with mine it says max pressure 44 psi so I've got 39psi all round. The tyres are 195/50R15's where they used to be 165/65/14 or something like that. I think the book recommends 32psi all round.
The Tyre Bible is a really good resource for fact and figures about tyres http://www.carbibles.com/tyre_bible_pg3.html
My worry is, if it rains will it just be like I'm on ice with the slightly reduced contact patch? Is that worth the possible 5% gain in fuel efficiency?
Tyre pressure is such a black art. Some say, always stick with manufactures guidelines regardless of size of tyre. Some say, increase a bit, some say decrease a bit. This guy suggests taking the max allowed pressure for the particular tyre and minus 10% gets you your ideal pressure.
I'm trying it at the moment.
So with mine it says max pressure 44 psi so I've got 39psi all round. The tyres are 195/50R15's where they used to be 165/65/14 or something like that. I think the book recommends 32psi all round.
The Tyre Bible is a really good resource for fact and figures about tyres http://www.carbibles.com/tyre_bible_pg3.html
The handling feels ok. I find it hard to tell one pressure from the next. I'd say the ride is a little bit harder but it's just a crappy 1.2 Clio so it's difficult to tell if it's actually any better cos it's gash to begin with.Originally Posted by The Wheel & Tyre Bible
Every tyre has a maximum inflation pressure stamped on the side somewhere. This is the maximum pressure the tyre can safely achieve under load. It is not the pressure you should inflate them to.
Having said this, I've given up using the door pillar sticker as my starting point and instead use the max.pressure-10% theory. According to the wags on many internet forums you can get the best performance by inflating them to 10% less than their recommended maximum pressure (the tyres, not the wags - they already haves inflated egos). It's a vague rule of thumb, and given that every car is different in weight and handling, it's a bit of a sledgehammer approach. But from my experience it does seem to provide a better starting point for adjusting tyre pressures. So to go back to my Subaru Impreza example, the maximum pressure on my Yokohama tyres was 44psi. 10% of that is 4.4, so 44-4.4=39.6psi which is about where I ended up. On my Element, the maximum pressure is 40psi so the 10% rule started me out at 36psi. I added one more to see what happened and it got better. Going up to 38psi and it definitely went off the boil, so for my vehicle and my driving style, 37psi on the Element was the sweet spot.
Read more: http://www.carbibles.com/tyre_bible_...#ixzz0pyblCLkm
My worry is, if it rains will it just be like I'm on ice with the slightly reduced contact patch? Is that worth the possible 5% gain in fuel efficiency?