Tyre pressures are always a compromise, as there are several (often conflicting) factors to consider.
Firstly, tyre life. The pressure needs to be set high enough to avoid excessive temperature rise in use - but this merely begs the question as to what is excessive and what use we are talking about - travel on the Stuart highway (no speed limit) with the air temperature around fifty is very different from driving round the suburbs in winter in Canberra for instance. The actual pressure needed to keep the same temperature rise will vary according to the construction of the tyre and the tread type and composition.
Secondly, vehicle handling. The rigidity of the tyre depends on the pressure, and too low a pressure allows the tyre to flex between the ground contact and the wheel, decreasing the precision of the handling. It is important to keep the same amount of flex front and rear (to avoid unexpected handling characteristics), which is one reason you need to increase pressures when loaded. Unless the suspension design is so bad that it needs to be compensated for by having different tyre characteristics front and rear, in general the higher the pressure, the more precise the handling.
Thirdly, ride. Generally the lower the pressure, the better the ride.
Fourthly, adhesion. The adhesion of a tyre depends on the tread making contact over the whole width and length of the footprint. This will not happen if the tyre pressure is too low or two high.
Fifthly, flotation. The amount that the tyre sinks into soft ground depends almost entirely on the tyre pressure. Not really relevant except offroad.
The actual pressure recommended by the manufacturer depends on their assessment of the above factors, mainly from experience. It is of interest that with my 110 the pressures recommended for the UK are superseded for Australia - and the Australian pressures are quite a bit higher, I'm guessing because of the higher ambient temperatures. There are quite detailed specifications for increase in pressure for both speed and load from 35/35 (speeds to 110 unloaded) to 60/65 (fully loaded, speeds above 130).
With non standard tyres pressures may need to be varied from the specified ones, but for normal driving the variation will be very little if any. Thicker walled tyres driven at high speed in high temperatures need higher pressures to limit temperature rise, and wider tyres will tolerate lower pressures, and may in fact need them to avoid a harsher ride.
However, as one_iota says, experimentation is the key to establishing the optimum pressure - but the placarded pressures are probably the best starting point regardless of the tyre size or type.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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