A general rule of thumb for all road going vechicles weather car, lorry, van is 30psi for summer months and 28psi during winter. The size of the wheel and volume of air may vary but a pressure of 30psi will give you a properly inflated tyre. should the tyre be underinflated you will get uneven tyre wear.
2007-03-14 03:30:21
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answer #1
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answered by masterchief irl 2
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This can be worked out by the weight on the front wheels or the rear wheels and the tyre manufacturers weight specifications.
It may be that if you use a light truck tyre instead of a car tyre that the tyre pressures are different. I guess though that 28 and 30 probably are about right. Now save money, look for LT in the tyre spec, try and buy tyres that are called LT you will get double the mileage for a cheaper price.
This also applies to many cars. Mine for example on Pirelli2000 gave about 20000 miles, on the LT equivalent I have now done in excess of 35000 and the tyres are about half worn.
2007-03-13 08:37:30
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answer #2
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answered by rinfrance 4
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If its purely leaping out of 2d and third then you certainly've a difficulty with the gearbox selector's, probably the hands are bent or the kit field syncs are burnt. Is a professionals job to repair, try a scrap backyard for yet another gearbox.
2016-11-25 00:54:36
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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look inside the drivers door, on the door pillars,theres usually info on tyre press there
2007-03-13 08:25:24
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answer #4
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answered by annon 2
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look up what the factory specs recomend.
Remember, dont go by the tires recomended inflation, go by the car, truck, etc.... recomendation.
2007-03-13 08:17:51
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answer #5
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answered by matt_archbold2002 4
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check the petrol cap
2007-03-13 08:26:34
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answer #6
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answered by Damio 2
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It should say on the sidewall of your tire.
2007-03-13 08:23:38
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answer #7
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answered by curious 7
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