I searched and looked through many pages of threads and cant find a clear answer. A lot of bashing and opinions is all I find! Anyways, my question is: I am running the stock 15's with the wheel covers off... what PSI should I be at for max MPG? Also, should I put the wheel covers back on to increase my MPG? Thank you
I am running 36 in my winter tyres 195/65/16. I usually run up to 40 in my 16" summers Doubt covers will make any measurable difference to mpg
i remember reading something about running 40PSI but i couldnt find anything. I just took my car in for the 10K service and they put the tires at 35PSI and my MPG is down to like 47 on the display whereas its always been 50+... i had the PSI at 40 just couldnt remember 100%
Winter snow tires 15s. 42 front 40 rear Summer. 15s. 46 front 44 rear Works good for me after a lot of different trying
Plenty of forum topics on this, but for my 15" tires I put in 36 psi front and 38 psi in the back. My over all mpg is usually 50+ but starting to go down due to colder weather and winter mix in the gas. It will probably stay in the upper 40's mpg's for about four to five months until spring time hits. No covers with mud flaps on my vehicle and window visors installed. It all boils down to how you drive it, if you want better mpg's. Hope that helps you!
A lot of members run their psi up to max sidewall pressure for best mpg. I personally run mine at 40F/38R. The higher psi is a little too stiff for me. I do not remember seeing any testing that shows an actual psi versus mpg graph. I have not noticed any mpg impact from removing wheel covers.
thanks for all the input and no bashing!! Ill set back to 40PSI and see how it goes! Happy thanksgiving to everyone!
If you want the absolute highest mileage, you can't go wrong with the sidewall max (which is what I run). However, many people find the ride too harsh at that pressure. There is a comparison of different pressures coasting distances here. It looks like after 45PSI, there isn't much of a difference in rolling resistance.
Mainly in older bias-ply tires. Radial tires have steel belts in them that keep them in shape better. There are many people who use the sidewall max or even higher and most see even wear over the life of the tire. Just keep an eye on your tires and rotate them every 5-10k miles.
Interesting! I think i will go up to 42PSI and see what i get. Ill update next week with results. One other thing that is to my disadvantage is that its starting to get cold in the mornings (28-30 degrees) and from what i read they change the blend in the gas up here in UT
Yep, winter isn't kind to gas mileage. I've been averaging about 60MPG up until this tank. Its been in the 30s in the morning and I'm only getting about 51MPG on the MFD.
At max sidewall pressure on my 15" Intregrities I was still getting edge wear, a sign of underinflation.
Run 40 psi front and 38 psi rear, yes 2 pounds less in rear helps the car to track better more stable. I have done this for 8+ years in both of mine, 2005 and now 2012 and both have worn evenly across the tire, no problems at all!
My 15's, 44 in front, 42 rear, rotate every 2k miles. So far no noticeable tread change. My gain was 7
Wow, that's extremely frequent. I rotated every 10k miles on the OE 215/45/17 Bridgestone Turanza EL400-02. Got 65k+ out of them and perfectly even wear across all four.
^ Agree. The object of tire rotation is just to even out the tire set's wear, over it's lifetime. It's kind of like flipping a steak on a grill, theoretically even one flip would do.
Here is an update as of 12/9/13 I raised the PSI to 42 all around and i still am only getting 47MPG... We do have the winter fuel blend going on and its been WAY cold here the last week, only getting into the teens. I think i am going to lower the PSI back down for a softer ride since the MPG is down no matter what i do. Thanks for all the info and help!