- First Name
- YoK
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2018
- Threads
- 21
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- 715
- Reaction score
- 361
- Location
- DFW
- Vehicle(s)
- '19 FK8 CW #22485
- Thread starter
- Banned
- #1
Hi all,
So the TPMS on my R went off 2 days ago and I just today checked the air (haven't driven since). I noticed my dealer filled my OEM tires with ~50 PSI of nitrogen air. I lost some air on my front left and back right tires to 48PSI, so rather than going up, I adjusted the front right and back left instead to 48. Reasoning is because I saw labeling around the tires indicate a max of 51PSI. I drove for about 10-15 miles and the TPMS went off again, got home and now they're reading 52PSI. I assume the difference is from reading cold vs. having the tires wamed up from the drive? What exactly is the recommended air for these Continentals??
Also the label by the door panel indicates 35front/33rear PSI setup... Is this... really what other folks are riding with their stock tires? I don't want the air to be too low and cause the stock wheels' balance. I already ride in comfort mode in most cases, on roads that I'm unsure of, to mitigate the issue.
Thanks for your input.
So the TPMS on my R went off 2 days ago and I just today checked the air (haven't driven since). I noticed my dealer filled my OEM tires with ~50 PSI of nitrogen air. I lost some air on my front left and back right tires to 48PSI, so rather than going up, I adjusted the front right and back left instead to 48. Reasoning is because I saw labeling around the tires indicate a max of 51PSI. I drove for about 10-15 miles and the TPMS went off again, got home and now they're reading 52PSI. I assume the difference is from reading cold vs. having the tires wamed up from the drive? What exactly is the recommended air for these Continentals??
Also the label by the door panel indicates 35front/33rear PSI setup... Is this... really what other folks are riding with their stock tires? I don't want the air to be too low and cause the stock wheels' balance. I already ride in comfort mode in most cases, on roads that I'm unsure of, to mitigate the issue.
Thanks for your input.
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