Tire Pressure
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Re: Tire Pressure
I run Excelsior 450 x 19 tyres (Dunlop copy)on my TC and use 30 psi
front and rear. I found the steering too heavy and too much
oversteer with 24 on the front (Bishop box and no wedges. I'd read a
comment that with these pressures (30 psi) handling was "interesting"
in the wet. I went on a very wet rally last weekend and had no
problems even when hitting the anchors quite hard. An article in the
Octagon Car Club Bulletin suggested that reducing rear pressure with
respect to front improved oversteer (which is what I've found).
Mark Jablonski
Melbourne Australia
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Tire Pressure
A customer came into my friends shop yesterday with his TC. He has 16" wheels and the Dunlop tires looked "low". I checked the tire pressure and it was 16 pounds on all four tires.
I know we have had this discussion several times in the past and the general consensus seemed to be that tire pressure between 26 - 30 pounds was OK.
Is that still a good rule of thumb for the tires on 16" wheels?
Doug Pulver
TC 5850 (with 6 new studs in the RH bearing carrier - one of which is now spinning as I tighten up the brake drum holding nut - aaaaaarrrrrrgggghghhhhhhh!)
San Diego, CA
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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AW: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
Dear Dog Pulver,
Most of the tyres do have a recommendation of air pressure
for the normal load conditions casted on the side wall where you can also
read the production date of the tyre.
Madhu
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Von: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com]Im Auftrag
von DougPulver@aol.com
Gesendet: Montag, 13. Juni 2005 01:37
An: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com
Betreff: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
A customer came into my friends shop yesterday with his TC. He has 16"
wheels and the Dunlop tires looked "low". I checked the tire pressure and
it was 16 pounds on all four tires.
I know we have had this discussion several times in the past and the general
consensus seemed to be that tire pressure between 26 - 30 pounds was OK.
Is that still a good rule of thumb for the tires on 16" wheels?
Doug Pulver
TC 5850 (with 6 new studs in the RH bearing carrier - one of which is now
spinning as I tighten up the brake drum holding nut -
aaaaaarrrrrrgggghghhhhhhh!)
San Diego, CA
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Tue Aug 03, 2004 10:50 am
Re: Tire Pressure
Madhu:
Although well intended, your advice is incorrect. The tire pressure listed on the sidewall of any tire is the maximum pressure for that particular tire, as determined by the manufacturer, regardless of what vehicle it is mounted on. As you are aware, one tire can fit many different vehicles. Each vehicle will likely require a different tire pressure due to many factors, weight, suspension, shocks, load, etc. The maximum pressure on the sidewall is typically somewhere above 40 pounds. That much pressure would cause serious ride, handling and braking problems in most cars.
Bob Leinen
Deputy Director of Public Works
City of Dearborn
2951 Greenfield
Dearborn, MI 48120
Ph: (313) 943-2073
Fax: (313) 943-2067
E-mail: rleinen@ci.dearborn.mi.us
-----Original Message-----
From: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Paroor
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2005 3:13 AM
To: DougPulver@aol.com; mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: AW: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
Dear Dog Pulver,
Most of the tyres do have a recommendation of air pressure
for the normal load conditions casted on the side wall where you can also
read the production date of the tyre.
Madhu
-----Urspr ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com]Im Auftrag
von DougPulver@aol.com
Gesendet: Montag, 13. Juni 2005 01:37
An: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com
Betreff: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
A customer came into my friends shop yesterday with his TC. He has 16"
wheels and the Dunlop tires looked "low". I checked the tire pressure and
it was 16 pounds on all four tires.
I know we have had this discussion several times in the past and the general
consensus seemed to be that tire pressure between 26 - 30 pounds was OK.
Is that still a good rule of thumb for the tires on 16" wheels?
Doug Pulver
TC 5850 (with 6 new studs in the RH bearing carrier - one of which is now
spinning as I tighten up the brake drum holding nut -
aaaaaarrrrrrgggghghhhhhhh!)
San Diego, CA
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- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 10:06 pm
AW: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
Dear Bob Leinen,
Thanks for the advise. I normally used the recomonded
pressure on the tyre or very often on the fuel tank cover. ( not on TC) But
depending on the load and out side temperature varied a one or two pounds. I
always watched the tires how they wear out. If the wear is more on the side
then I put more pressure. If the wear is more in the middle then I reduced
the pressure a bit. This is my experience from other cars.
My MG TC is not yet on the road. So I do not have any right to discuss with
others.
Thanks for the advise.
Madhu
-----Urspr ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com]Im Auftrag
von Leinen, Robert
Gesendet: Montag, 13. Juni 2005 16:17
An: Paroor; DougPulver@aol.com; mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com
Betreff: RE: [mg-tabc] Tire Pressure
Madhu:
Although well intended, your advice is incorrect. The tire pressure listed
on the sidewall of any tire is the maximum pressure for that particular
tire, as determined by the manufacturer, regardless of what vehicle it is
mounted on. As you are aware, one tire can fit many different vehicles.
Each vehicle will likely require a different tire pressure due to many
factors, weight, suspension, shocks, load, etc. The maximum pressure on the
sidewall is typically somewhere above 40 pounds. That much pressure would
cause serious ride, handling and braking problems in most cars.
Bob Leinen
Deputy Director of Public Works
City of Dearborn
2951 Greenfield
Dearborn, MI 48120
Ph: (313) 943-2073
Fax: (313) 943-2067
E-mail: rleinen@ci.dearborn.mi.us
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- Joined: Wed Jul 19, 2006 9:06 pm
Fw: tire pressure
group,
I read on this sight, 30 pounds, and I tried it and the car handle much better. Have dunlops, almost worn out at 8,000 - 10,000 miles. I am so spoiled with radials. Are there any radials that fit and w ork on the 19 inch TC rim. My son suggested motor cycle tire, but their foot print is very small.
Or 15-16 inch spoke with radials. ride may be better, but the "look" is gone.
Bill Webb
TC 3338
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Joined: Sun Mar 12, 2006 6:24 am
Re: Fw: tire pressure
Bill,
I would be vary careful before I considered fitting any radial tire to the 19" TC wheel. The chassis was not designed for the extra traction and stick in the corners the radial tire would provide. You may find that your suspension is torn from the mounting points due to the added stresses.
Dave Phillips
billsoquel billsoquel@comcast.net> wrote:
group,
I read on this sight, 30 pounds, and I tried it and the car handle much better. Have dunlops, almost worn out at 8,000 - 10,000 miles. I am so spoiled with radials. Are there any radials that fit and w ork on the 19 inch TC rim. My son suggested motor cycle tire, but their foot print is very small.
Or 15-16 inch spoke with radials. ride may be better, but the "look" is gone.
Bill Webb
TC 3338
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: Fw: tire pressure
hi Bill - don't even think about radials!!! None available for 19" as far as
I know, and those who have tried 16" say that the wheel bearings are almost
ripped off the axle by the extra grip so stick with std. tyres and let
the car slide, as it was designed to do...
Happy MotorinG !
TCRoger
> > I read on this sight, 30 pounds, and I tried it and the car handle much > better. Have dunlops, almost worn out at 8,000 - 10,000 miles. I am so > spoiled with radials. Are there any radials that fit and w ork on the 19 > inch TC rim. My son suggested motor cycle tire, but their foot print is > very small. > > Or 15-16 inch spoke with radials. ride may be better, but the "look" is > gone. > > Bill Webb > TC 3338
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- Joined: Mon Oct 15, 2007 5:44 pm
Re: Fw: tire pressure
I'll second that Roger! The PO fitted Conti radials
to 48 spoke wires on the big Healey. First excursion
and several disturbing rear-end clunk-twangs later,
the car was bucking like a bronco and several back
wheel spokes were forming their own swirly patterns in
the air! I know the Healey is twice the engine size
but the TC wheels are a bigger diameter
so..............................!
Regards, David Lodge, in rainy (for a chamge)
Vancouver
--- Roger Furneaux roger.46tc@virgin.net> wrote:
___________________________________________________________ Yahoo! Answers - Got a question? Someone out there knows the answer. Try it now. http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/> hi Bill - don't even think about radials!!! None > available for 19" as far as > I know, and those who have tried 16" say that the > wheel bearings are almost > ripped off the axle by the extra grip so stick > with std. tyres and let > the car slide, as it was designed to do... > > Happy MotorinG ! > > TCRoger > > > > > I read on this sight, 30 pounds, and I tried it > and the car handle much > > better. Have dunlops, almost worn out at 8,000 - > 10,000 miles. I am so > > spoiled with radials. Are there any radials that > fit and w ork on the 19 > > inch TC rim. My son suggested motor cycle tire, > but their foot print is > > very small. > > > > Or 15-16 inch spoke with radials. ride may be > better, but the "look" is > > gone. > > > > Bill Webb > > TC 3338 > > >
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Tire pressure
To the comfort seekers among us,
The brown book states that Dunlop prescribes tire pressures of 24 psi front and 26 psi rear for the 450-19. I'm presntly suffering from a bad back and as is well known the TC is not the smootest ride in town.
Does anyone have a recommendation for lowering the pressure to improve the ride quality without compromising safety. A lower speed would be acceptable.
Bjorn TC 7773
Silverton, Oregon
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