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Posted

I was curious too, what you guys were running on E/LT tires. My installer put mine at 60, was really harsh. I put them down to 46, but I am thinking I can still go lower (as long as I don't have a load).

Posted

You have to be careful running low psi on LT tires. You have to add more air on a LT tire to equal the load capacity of the OEM P rated tires. Toyo has a conversion chart you can download that will tell you where you need to be. On my last truck (2002 silverado) I ran the stock size tire but needed to run them at around 48 psi to equal the same load capacity as the stock tires at 35 psi. I ended up running 48 psi in the front tires and 44 psi in the back tires. Running low psi in a LT tire can cause it to build up too much heat.

  • Like 2
Posted

You have to be careful running low psi on LT tires. You have to add more air on a LT tire to equal the load capacity of the OEM P rated tires. Toyo has a conversion chart you can download that will tell you where you need to be. On my last truck (2002 silverado) I ran the stock size tire but needed to run them at around 48 psi to equal the same load capacity as the stock tires at 35 psi. I ended up running 48 psi in the front tires and 44 psi in the back tires. Running low psi in a LT tire can cause it to build up too much heat.

 

Yeah, I know you can't (shouldn't) go as low as P tires, but I also know setting them at 64 PSI for daily driving with no load isn't necessary :).

 

Do you have a link to this chart? I'll head over to thier site too and try to find it. Thank you!

Posted

I have the chart on my computer at the house but I will try to find the link. I used this chart several times over the years because I get a new half ton work truck every few years that are base models with tiny tires P tires and we usually (well used to) put on a set of bigger LT AT tires within a month because of the rough roads I travel on. It has always come out to about the same though, some where between 45 to 50 psi and this applies wether it is a load range c, d, or e tire. So basically a C load tire (usually 50 psi max) should be aired up to around 45 psi and the same for a D or E (usually 80psi max tires) air them up to 45 psi or so as well. I run 265/70-17 Goodyear Kevlar AT Load Range E tires on my work truck and I keep them at 50 psi most of the time.

Posted (edited)

Here is the link

https://toyotires2-1524598101.netdna-ssl.com/assets/lib:toyo%20content/Application_of_Load_Inflation_Tables_20150623_Final.pdf

 

Look at pages 5 and 11, that will answer your questions of going from a P to an LT. It will also give you conversions for going to a bigger tire than OEM and what psi to run at.

 

Looking at the numbers if I replaced my OEM P265/65 18 tires with a set of LT 275/65 18 tires I would have to inflate them to 43 psi to carry the same load. The OEM tires at 35 psi have a load weight of 2469 but you divide that by 1.10 which gives the load weight to be 2245 lbs. The LT 275-65-18 tires have a load weight of 2130 lbs at 40 psi and 2310 lbs at 45 psi. The weight I need falls in the middle of that so you divide the difference by 5 (2310-2130 = 180 / 5 = 36. That would put 43 psi at a weight handling capacity of 2238 which is pretty close to the required 2245 lbs from GM.

Edited by tnchevy
  • Like 1
Posted

Here is the link

https://toyotires2-1524598101.netdna-ssl.com/assets/lib:toyo%20content/Application_of_Load_Inflation_Tables_20150623_Final.pdf

 

Look at pages 5 and 11, that will answer your questions of going from a P to an LT. It will also give you conversions for going to a bigger tire than OEM and what psi to run at.

 

Looking at the numbers if I replaced my OEM P265/65 18 tires with a set of LT 275/65 18 tires I would have to inflate them to 43 psi to carry the same load. The OEM tires at 35 psi have a load weight of 2469 but you divide that by 1.10 which gives the load weight to be 2245 lbs. The LT 275-65-18 tires have a load weight of 2130 lbs at 40 psi and 2310 lbs at 45 psi. The weight I need falls in the middle of that so you divide the difference by 5 (2310-2130 = 180 / 5 = 36. That would put 43 psi at a weight handling capacity of 2238 which is pretty close to the required 2245 lbs from GM.

 

Perfect, thank you!

 

I just did the math as well.

 

P265/65/18 @ 35psi = 2469

Divided By 1.10 = 2245 (Now need to match this number in LT in m size)

 

LT285/70/17 @ 45psi = 2285 (Where I am putting them)

LT285/70/17 @ 50psi = 2535

LT285/70/17 @ 65psi = 2910 (Where the shop put my tires)

 

That is close enough for me.

Posted

I am looking into getting some 0 offset wheels and running some bigger tires on a 2" RC level
Has anyone successfully run 315/70R17's
Looking at BFG AT's

Posted

I am looking into getting some 0 offset wheels and running some bigger tires on a 2" RC level

Has anyone successfully run 315/70R17's

Looking at BFG AT's

 

Pretty sure you'll need more than just a level to run that tire without rubbing. That tire is over 34".

Posted

There are people on here running tires that wide with offset wheels, just not sure exactly what their set ups are. I didn't know if they would be too wide or not. I know the height works on a 295 with a little fender well liner trimming... just not sure about a 315.

Posted

There are people on here running tires that wide with offset wheels, just not sure exactly what their set ups are. I didn't know if they would be too wide or not. I know the height works on a 295 with a little fender well liner trimming... just not sure about a 315.

 

I'm 285/70/17 with 0 offset and 2" level. No issues at all.

 

With a 315, you're theoretically 30 mm wider, so 15mm in and 15mm out. But you'd also be about 2" taller. I can tell you that I don't have 2" of room at full lock.

Posted

Yeah, I've actually got 285/65/18's on my stock wheels right now without a level and they are perfectly fine. So I wondered if with a 0 offset wheel vs the 25 offset stock wheels a slightly wider tire and taller would rub any metal or anything. Because I am ok with trimming the felt fender liner if needed but if it rubs anything other than that i'm not even going to think about it.

Posted (edited)

I am looking into getting some 0 offset wheels and running some bigger tires on a 2" RC level

Has anyone successfully run 315/70R17's

Looking at BFG AT's

 

Edit: I just realized that what you want to run is a bigger diameter. You'll likely rub some.

 

I'm running a 0 offset wheel with 33" tires on a 2" RC level.

 

380c8d52747cc826b9e466c9aff012cb.jpg

 

511c4daa9062258d2c1e1f80f8b4323d.jpg

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Edited by rookhoe
Posted

Edit: I just realized that what you want to run is a bigger diameter. You'll likely rub some.

 

I'm running a 0 offset wheel with 33" tires on a 2" RC level.

 

380c8d52747cc826b9e466c9aff012cb.jpg

 

511c4daa9062258d2c1e1f80f8b4323d.jpg

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Thanks for the input! With the way yours looks I may just stick with 33's! Yours looks great! are those 33x12.5?

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