twomountainlions
Well-known member
When in camping mode, I tend to leave them at 30 psi all the time. If it's a particularly long and rough trail, I'll reduce to 20 psi. If I get stuck in sand, then it's ~10 psi, but that has never happened with this truck. If it's a long highway stretch I'll bump it up to 38.
The tires are 35x13" and are rated for 4,000 lbs each at 65 psi. My actual weight is about 2,000 lbs per.
Viair has performance specs on their website. At 80 psi the fill rate to about half what it is at 20 psi, but it should still work well. I bought a clone of the 88p digital, so I'll let you know how that goes when I get it. If it works ok I plan to rig it so I can fill two tires at once. It comes with a silly-long hose, instead of a long cord... but I'll make my own long cord, and change the hose.
According to other sources fill rate for some of the 2 cfu pumps (normally rated at 0 psi) drops to be really slow, like 1 psi per min by the time tire gets over 65psi.
Vair has RV pumps that are output rated at 80 psi, not at 0 psi, and these are $300+ pumps they recommend for tire situation like mine.
For 30-ish psi tires anything like Vair 88 should work ok, especially if its 4 tires to inflate, main thing not to get amazon lemon.
Based on what many people with truck campers, I guess heavy ones, say they seem to have their tires at 65-80psi, even 110. I wonder how you arrive to 38 psi as optimal highway pressure for the weight, since your tire is weight rated at 65 psi, I understand you reduce psi based on actual weight but relationship must be non linear and its usually better to give things much extra room, I thought
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