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Mick_Marsh
4th November 2015, 10:47 PM
What tyre pressures are used for military vehicles?

I say a 4x4 Perentie with 280 marked on the front guard and 380 on the rear guard I think. Would that be right?

What are the front and rear pressures for the 6x6?

Oh, and the front and rear for a SWB 2a?

Note: this thread is not about what your personal opinion is about what you run in your vehicle. This is about what the ADF runs in their vehicles and markings.

rovernutter
4th November 2015, 11:38 PM
It would vary by vehicle type as it is determined by the weight of the vehicle. That is why they put it on the guards.

Blknight.aus
4th November 2015, 11:42 PM
This is about what the ADF runs in their vehicles

Ummmmm speaking professionally...

you probably want to run with the opinions of people here and not what the ADF runs in their tyres.

of course, if what your asking is "what tyre pressure would the maintainers like the operaters to read from the EMEI's and actually keep in the black round things" thats a completely different answer to what actually happens...

what is actually run in the tyre is generally only ever the nominated pressure for a brief while.. heres how it goes.

tyre is over inflated because its just going to leak down anyway
tyre leaks down to the correct pressure and is checked its right so it'll never be checked again until the handling goes squdgy
the handling goes squdgy so a repair request is raised with a suspected steering/suspenion fault it comes in nearly driving on the rims, the tyres are inflated to the correct pressure and sent on its way and I get to pull a Scotty.

mick88
5th November 2015, 05:36 AM
Mick our FFR Perentie is marked 325 kpa on the front and 450 kpa on the rear. I thought these were a bit on the high side and would make the ride rough, so I played around with lower pressures. At these lower pressures I found that the vehicle at times could be a bit daunting if it dropped off the edge of the bitumen on a narrow road etc. The vehicle is never heavily loaded, just two dogs, the wife's golf clubs and our travel bags. I decided that maybe the Army knew what they were about when they came up with those tire pressures, safety, handling, load capacity would have all been given consideration.
I went back to the recommended pressures and found it is so much better to drive, probably feels a bit harsh for the first few kays until the tires warm/soften up a bit.
A while back I picked up a four cylinder engine and had it sitting right at the back of the tub. It was a 500 kay journey and you wouldn't even have known it was there.
Running the recommended (Army) pressure in the front also compliments the "Armstrong" steering.


Cheers, Mick.

weeds
5th November 2015, 07:26 AM
4psi rule......not that I have ever bothered but it would get you in the ball park

I would wack in 38 (if you are empty) all round and see how it feels