View Full Version : Tire Pressure


TurboEight
11-01-2008, 03:11 PM
What tire pressure should I be putting into these size tires:

245/40/18

255/40/18


Normal driving and a road course.

Anyone share their experiences?

alnielsen
11-01-2008, 03:20 PM
Tire pressure depends on the tire, wheel width, alignment and so on. Use recomended pressures for the street. On the track, start with 4 or 5 psi over recommended settings (maybe even up to 10 psi). Then, use chalk or white shoe polish on the edge of the tire to get the proper tire roll. You may have different settings front to rear. Lastly, you will have to change the balance for feel.

TurboEight
11-01-2008, 06:55 PM
Yea, i was hoping for something i can start working with.

I just listed my tire sizes up top..

I m thinking 34-35 PIS for daily Driving?

Mazurfer
11-01-2008, 09:14 PM
That's sounds about right for cold pressure.

imput1234
11-01-2008, 09:14 PM
32 is what Mazda says, I think they know what they are talking about.

stuntman
11-06-2008, 08:52 PM
32psi cold will grow to ~38psi hot

36-38psi hot will grow to the low 40's hot (what I do) = better gas mileage ;)

c41250n
11-06-2008, 10:08 PM
i dont konw.....i like running lower tire pressure at the rear when im on the track!

JantzenRX-8
11-06-2008, 11:40 PM
32psi cold will grow to ~38psi hot

36-38psi hot will grow to the low 40's hot (what I do) = better gas mileage ;)

What are the trade offs though? Better gas mileage has to equal worse something.

Silver06
11-07-2008, 02:01 AM
What are the trade offs though? Better gas mileage has to equal worse something.

Theoretically, if the tire is over inflated then you'll have uneven wear trending towards the middle of the tread.... But, with our negative camber, this isn't an issue - certainly not at 40 psi.

The only reason for running the rears a little below the fronts is to 'tune' away a small bit of oversteer. On the track, you can feel a difference.

On the street, I run 33psi front and rear, for no apparent reason. I can confirm (via my aftermarket tpms) a 4 to 5 psi gain cold to hot on the street.