I'm with you guys on the lower pressures. Guys spend a fortune on suspension upgrades where 26 and 28 Psi fixes all but the biggest issues on the ride. I personally use 1.8 bar (26 Psi) in the front, 2 bar (29 Psi) in the rear unladen, and 2.2 bar (32 Psi) in the rear under laden conditions (my personal guidelines for a Defender 90). I have in  over 20 years of Landrover driving (civil Engineering and road building) never torn a sidewall sticking to these pressures. 110 and 130 drivers needs to find an optimum for the rear, but I do not agree with the blanket 40Psi rule (front and rear) that seems to be the standard out here in Northwest Australia.
 
Rollovers with low pressures would be driver error, especially on rock. When you are crawling (as you should in rock) you often get pretty severe articulation that can result in "bounce". If your tyres are rock hard, the equal/opposite force thing comes into play and a rollover is most likely. Soft tyres (not so soft to break beads and pinch sidewalls) will cusion impact, mould over all but the sharpest rocks and generally give you better grip. A sidewall will damage much easier when rock hard than when it's able to "give" when a rock pushes against it. Obviously unnesesary wheel spin will negate this theory and cut your sidewalls to pieces, hence Low 1st in rock!
 
This has worked for me over the years and there would be supporters of the other side of the coin.
 
 
 
Cheers!
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