Postby Ted » Tue Sep 30, 2008 4:18 pm
No real generic rule for tyre pressures, comes down to tyre construction, weight of vehicle and distribution of weight (and balance of car). I would agree that too much is better than too little in tyre pressure, but too much is not as good as just right. Working out just right for your car on your tyres is the key. The MX5 is a fairly light car which is well balanced, and relatively low profile tyres (later cars especially). I would simply start with the placard number as the starting point, and then play around from there and see what suits. For my MX5, which is on 195/50/15 RE001s, I like 33psi cold but when I had A539s I liked 35psi cold. On a 3MPS, the placard says something lie 34/32psi whereas on the 6MPS with the same tyre, same size, same sized rim it says 38psi. I use 39psi cold on my 6MPS, but I wouldn't do that on the 3MPS. I would also expect a manufacturer trying to sell cars have to try and strike a balance. Look at the MX5, fairly light car, fairly small dimensions on 205/40/17s with a 7 inch rim or something like that. Add relatively small amounts of suspension travel, and you could end up with a fairly uncomfortable ride. On the NC, I have noticed 2 different tyres on new cars (Michelin and Bridgestone) and I find that I like more pressure in the Bridgestone.
However, then other factors come into play, like human preferences. It could be adjusting to suit your driving style (trail brake a lot, harsh on and off the pedals, abrupt steering, smooth) and tyre pressures are a cheap way of customising it slightly. And the better the chassis balance of the car, the more I notice the effects of tyre pressures. I'll give you a quick example, I drove the same RX8 for 4 days in Perth this year at AHG. On day 1, it was bucketing and so we just drove the car as we got it from Mazda. Felt great. On day 2, we just drove it and it was a rocketship and handled brilliantly. Too well, as we started to scrub out the outside tyres. So for day 3, a bit of tyre preservation went in and we stuck an extra 4psi in and equalized. Car became an understeering pig with snap oversteer when you invariably had to back off mid corner, and turn in was woeful. Dropped the pressure by the end of the day, and the car was a neutral rocketship again.
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