Air Pressure - 275/55R20 Bridgestone Dueller HL Alenza

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JochenWoern

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I know I have asked this question before, but I will just ask it again as I am confused by two (2) complete different opinions by two (2) guys in the business.

What air pressure are you running on your 275/55R20 Bridgestone Dueller HL Alenza's or Good Years?

- The guy in the tire shop tells me that I should run the tires at 33 psi.
- The guy who alligned my truck tells me to run the tires at 40 psi, "of course the tire guy wants you to run at 33 psi so he can sell you a set of tires way faster".

So, most of the times my truck is empty, I drive the kids to school and commute in it to work. Never any heavy loads.

What pressure should I run?????
 
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chauncey0337

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I would find a happy medium. Less air pressure- less mpg's but better traction. More air pressure- better mpg's but stiffer ride. I have the H/L Alenza's at 35 psi.
 

91RS

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You need to run them at 32psi cold, they will wear very evenly at that pressure as long as you keep them rotated every 5k miles and make sure your truck is in alignment. That tire is very susceptible to cupping if you don't keep up with that. 32psi is what GM says to use in this tire by the way (on NBS and NNBS).
 
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JochenWoern

JochenWoern

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You need to run them at 32psi cold, they will wear very evenly at that pressure as long as you keep them rotated every 5k miles and make sure your truck is in alignment. That tire is very susceptible to cupping if you don't keep up with that. 32psi is what GM says to use in this tire by the way (on NBS and NNBS).

Are tires a science anymore? Now I have a 3rd number???!!! Ok, so 32 psi cold.

What is "cupping", what does it mean? Is that when the outer edge wears faster and has some "rough" surface?

- I ALWAYS rotate the tires every 5K miles, ALWAYS.
- Truck was aligned last week so all should be good there.

So the truck sat out in the garage over night, I therefore assume the tires to be "cold". Now I will change the pressure to 32 psi and that should be it?
 

91RS

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You get so many different numbers because people think they know better than the manufacturer of the vehicle and very few actually do. You'd be surprised how many people still think you have to use the max. pressure rating on the side of the tire all the time when you're actually only supposed to use it when the tire is at it's max. load rating. You're running a stock size tire so there isn't any reason not to use GM's recommended pressure. A few PSI more wouldn't really do much, but 40psi would wear out the center.

Here is a picture of a cupped tire:

tires2.jpg
 

sumo

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and will sound like you have off roading tires. To help prevent this rotate, Rotate, ROTATE
 

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