What do you guys recommend I set my tire pressures to? What does everyone else set there tire pressures to? I do have an XI with OEM runflat tires.
What do you guys recommend I set my tire pressures to? What does everyone else set there tire pressures to? I do have an XI with OEM runflat tires.
for everyday driving use what BMW put on the inside of the door jam. if you're talking autox, i'd go 5-8psi over recommended
Paul Seto - NCC Board Member & Social Chairman
2011 Mineral White M3 Coupe ZCP
2000 Titanium Silver M Roadster
2011 Space Gray 328ix Sedan
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The factory spec pressures favor understeer; much safer - all around - of course. Some of us tend to more towards equal F and R tire pressures for driving events. Chalk your tires and see how much rollover you're getting...and respond accordingly. But as for the street, going with BMW's numbers has to be a good thing to do.
Start out with 6-8 lbs over manufacturers spec. Then chalk your tires to see if you're rolling over or not getting to the edge of your tires (in terms of wear). Adjust accordingly until you get all the way to the edge of your tread. Most of the time, there is a little triangle that indicates the edge of the tread. That's where you should be.
Once you've got your baseline pressures, you can adjust them a bit to suite your cars behavior to make it more or less neutral. But first get to your baseline. Depending on what your car is doing, increasing/decreasing pressure or varying the pressure bias (front vs rear) will help dial out understeer/oversteer.
In a wet course, I leave stock pressures as there is usually not enough grip to roll your tires.
NCC
I am on new tires this season: Dunlop Direzza Star Specs. With last Sunday's hot weather, I finally had a chance to fiddle with my Z4's tire pressures.
In addition to what Pete stated, I would keep a log of what pressures you are running and how the car feels. After each run, note the hot tire pressure and your comments on vehicle handling. There is a lot of information available on the internet too. Basically what I have learned is there is an optimum tire pressure which, both above and below will yield less grip.
What I do is attempt to determine this optimum grip for both the front and rear tires, then keep the front tire pressure, and fiddle with the rear to get the desired handling changes.
The BMW recommendation is 33psi front and 36 psi rear on my car, which is a staggered 255 rear and 225 tire setup on 18" wheels. I found 36 front and 35 rear worked excellently for me. I would suggest making small changes to one end of the car only at a time and going from there. The internet and chalk technique can get you in the ballpark.
Below is a synopsis of my tire pressure notes from last Sunday.
Autocross Tuning Notes
April 26, 2009
Dunlop Direzza Z1
93 degrees, sunny
Early morning tire pressures were: Front: 36psi Rear 35 psi.
Afternoon (at event) pressures had risen to: Front 42psi Rear 41 psi.
--Adjusted pressures to Front 36psi Rear 35psi (took out a lot of air)—
At 36 Front/35 rear, overall grip was great. Car was slightly understeering.
After run #2 at these settings, adjusted pressures to 36 front 34 rear (-1psi rear) and car tended to oversteer more. Still mostly neutral, but inclined to oversteer more easily and felt less planted (rear). Rear grip less at 34psi than 35psi.
For the final run, adjusted pressures to 37Front / 36 Rear and car felt good.
All 4 run times were within 0.3 seconds.
Noel offers a lot of good information here. He did not mention what affect the sun shining on one side of the car might have.
Not necessarily recommended is my method: Set the pressures where you think you want them in late March. . . .that's it.
Woody
96 328is, 99 M Coupe, 04 330Ci
Yeah... once you reach GRAND PUBA level, then you don't adjust your tires anymore... you feel the pressure and the course adjusts to you... but that takes a lifetime..
Like some 10th degree black belt sheeat.
The rest of us just fiddle with pressures while cursing under our breaths that Woody is 1.2 seconds faster
Last edited by noelleslie; 04-29-2009 at 08:43 PM.
On a somewhat related topic, what gauge do people use/recommend?
As between the accutire gauge and the Psiclops, any thoughts?
Accutire: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000RN4GT6
Psiclops: http://www.tirerack.com/accessories/detail.jsp?ID=56&cat=Air+%26+Tread+Depth+Gauges.
I'm no expert, but from just looking at those websites I can say:
the first one looks to be a pain because it doesn't have a hose, so you need to be bent down to the tire valve.
and the second one seems way complex. Maybe it's a good idea, but just seems like more stuff to break to me.
Edit: not to mention that first one doesn't even have a bleed valve. No good there.
I bought a $14 dollar model with a hose and bleeder valve. Nothing special but it works well.
http://shop.advanceautoparts.com/web..._A|GRP2068____
NCC
Just don't drop any of them.
Mine has a rubber covering around around it.
Pete, I have that very model. Even red to match my car. These are fine gauges, but 1996 328ti is right, even though mine has a rubber covering, I make sure it doesn't get beat around. I had a digital model but that one had a delayed reading. The mechanical ones are instant, and the bleeder function is great too.
Car54 ...well, now Car52
Craig Brickner
Longacre gauges are excellent. I also get accurate results from the cheap pencils. For some reason, the moderately prices in between gauges have never worked out well for me.
2006 GMC Sierra 2500HD 4WD Duramax LBZ/Allison 6-speed
2002 BMW M3 - Alpinweiss III/Black
1999 323i KP/GTS2 - Alpinweiss III (Black Hood, other stuff)
1990 325is - Brilliantrot/Tan
1989 325is - Alpinweiss II/Black (S50B32)
1989 M3 - Alpinweiss II/Black (S62B50 in progress)
After all this I ended up running late and had no time to add any air. The car still ran great and didn't notice any issues with the OEM pressure recommendations.
What helps a lot is having the DTC on this time around.
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