30psi for the fronts and 29psi for the rears...why?
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30psi for the fronts and 29psi for the rears...why?
my car requires 30 psi up front and 29psi in the rear. why does subaru recommend more tire pressure in the front when most cars require the same pressure for both front and rears?
1992 Subaru Legacy L+
FWD
Automatic
FWD
Automatic
remember, the tire pressure is a "recommended" pressure. What works for some, may not work for others.
Josh
surrealmirage.com/subaru
1990 Legacy (AWD, 6MT, & EJ22T Swap)
2020 Outback Limted XT
If you need to get a hold of me please email me rather then pm
surrealmirage.com/subaru
1990 Legacy (AWD, 6MT, & EJ22T Swap)
2020 Outback Limted XT
If you need to get a hold of me please email me rather then pm
Woulda said it was to do with the weight except for my old golf having higher rear pressures than the front and the fronts definately way heavier. My only other thought is that it produces the handling balance that the company wants while giving decent wear rates.
If only I hadnt bought the bike, this would feel fast :P
the tires are all the same width. the factory tire size, which I follow is 185/70/HR14. The factory recommendation is 30psi front and 29psi rear. I usually put in 33 front and 32 rear. I'm still wondering why they recommend the tires to be inflated this way. Also, what tire pressures do you guys have in your legacy's? I understand the pressure will vary since most of you guys went with wider and lower profile tires.
1992 Subaru Legacy L+
FWD
Automatic
FWD
Automatic
The manufacturers are probably trying to dial in a certain grip level without going through the expense of putting on different roll bars and revised damper rates etc... Probably wanted to tweak the handling for the USDM market and wanted a little more grip in the back since Americans are so plum happy with great amounts of understeer and consider it safer. Drop some pressure in the back and they get a little stickier, blam! mission accomplished, cost: $0 (somewhere someone gets a promotion). This is all just a guess, though.
1993 WMP BC6 5MT EJ22T 9psi 3.9:1 213k 205/55R16
62.6 m/s @ 0.66 bar. Gotta love boost. :)
62.6 m/s @ 0.66 bar. Gotta love boost. :)
That's quite common to list different pressures for front and back. They do it for many reasons.
They list them really low to make the ride as comfortable as possible.
I run 38 all around. Higher pressures prevent tire roll, which is good for cornering. Don't want to go too high though or your tires never warm up and they deform so that you get a smaller contact patch. You usually drop the teh pressure for more launch traction, which isn't a big deal since most of us have AWD.
You can tune the cornering behavior with tire pressures. For example, less pressure in rear=more oversteer.
They list them really low to make the ride as comfortable as possible.
I run 38 all around. Higher pressures prevent tire roll, which is good for cornering. Don't want to go too high though or your tires never warm up and they deform so that you get a smaller contact patch. You usually drop the teh pressure for more launch traction, which isn't a big deal since most of us have AWD.
You can tune the cornering behavior with tire pressures. For example, less pressure in rear=more oversteer.
92ss, 66bsa thunderbolt, 92miata, 06wrx