Camper trailer <span class="highlight">tyre</span> <span class="highlight">pressures</span>

Submitted: Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 18:54
ThreadID: 47520 Views:17712 Replies:4 FollowUps:6
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Gidday all,

Quick question.
What sort of tyre pressures would you recommend for a camper trailer weighing approx. 750 kg with 265/70/16 tyres for the hwy and dirt roads? I have 40 for the road and 25 for the dirt in Hilux.

Thanks in advance.

Cheers Greg
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Reply By: MEMBER - Darian (SA) - Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 19:36

Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 19:36
I run BFG 245/70 R16 on my Campomatic - at about 1200kg, I use 35psi for the sealed and around 28psi on gravel roads. If the roads get rougher I just slow right down - at 28psi, I can see them flexing quite well and reckon that is the bottom limit for gravel and stones - could go lower of course for a slog in dry sand.
AnswerID: 251381

Follow Up By: Member - Oldplodder (QLD) - Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 07:54

Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 07:54
2nd that, about 35 bitumen, 28 gravel.
750 kg customline CT.

I run 235/85/16 10 ply LT tyres on paj and CT, max pressure is 80 psi.
On the car I run, when fully loaded , 40 front/50 rear, 34/40 gravel, 20 to 25 sand and the CT about 3 to 5 psi lower than the back of the car.

Use the length rule as below as a guess, and the 4 psi rule to confirm.
I always check tyre pressures just as we pull up at lunch time as a check.
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FollowupID: 512546

Reply By: Grungle - Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 19:51

Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 19:51
Hi Greg,

Saw an interesting part of a 4wd DVD recently that explained how to accurately set the pressure in your camper trailer.

Firstly set the pressures of the vehicles tyres first so that the footprint is of the same length on both the front set and rear set of tyres (I use 40PSI on the road and 24PSI off road as a rough guide). Take this footprint measurement then let your camper trailers tyres down so that the footprint is the same length. This will mean that all 6 tyres have the same footprint which is essentially what you are after. If you check the pressures of all the tyres you will find that the front, rear and camper will all have different pressures due to the distibution of weight etc however once you have done it once, you will know the tyre pressures for each set of tyres and can setup quickly without the need to measure again.

Hope this explanation makes sense.

Regards
David
AnswerID: 251385

Follow Up By: David from David and Justine Olsen's 4WD Tag-Along - Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 21:27

Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 21:27
Spot on. Set the car pressures via footprint. (length of footprint)

180mm for bitumen
220 to 240 for gravel
300 for sand
350 for difficult sand

Set the trailer footprint the same..easy as.
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Follow Up By: Member - andrew B (Kununurra) - Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 23:11

Sunday, Jul 08, 2007 at 23:11
Probably exposing myself for asking a stupid question here........how are you actually measuring the footprint leangth, on concrete before you head off???

Hang on, someone once told me ther are no stupid questions.......just stupid people LOL

Cheers Andrew
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Follow Up By: David from David and Justine Olsen's 4WD Tag-Along - Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 07:19

Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 07:19
the first few times you do it, do so on a hard surface. Once you have done it quite a few times, the eye-o-meter works fine.
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FollowupID: 512543

Follow Up By: Sand Man (SA) - Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 16:47

Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 16:47
I'm not sure I agree with this in total.

A contributing factor is whether you have the vehicle tyres correct in the first place.

The 4 psi rule is the best method to achieve this. If the tyres are overheating, or not getting hot enough, the footprint won't "fix" things up.

I set the pressure for the camper trailer tyres to be the same as the vehicle.
In my case, generally:-
36psi for bitumen
28psi for gravel/dirt
18psi for soft sand.
Bill


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Follow Up By: David from David and Justine Olsen's 4WD Tag-Along - Friday, Jul 27, 2007 at 19:21

Friday, Jul 27, 2007 at 19:21
The footprint is in my opinion (after 27 years) the best starting point. The 4 psi rule can be used thn not as a guide to pressure, but as a guide to maximum speed. More than 4psi increase - slow down.
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Reply By: Member - Bucky (VIC) - Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 05:52

Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 05:52
Tyre footprint can be easily measured, best to do on any firm surface.

Try this method; ,, trial and error, till you have it mastered
Get 2 rods/sticks/bits of wood and a tape measure.

Place one rod ( ect ) at front of tyre,, the other at rear of tyre ,
,,,,,,,Take care to just touch tyre, at both ends..,,,measure distance between rods.

Let tyres down on vehicle first, say to 25psi ( dirt/gravel ),,, 15 psi ( sand )
Do this on all tyres, and adjust pressures to get distance the same all round, including the camper.

" Voila " all footprints the same.

Works a treat, and dosen't matter about weight on vehicle or trailer

Note ;... rods should measure the same distance, either at the tyre, or at the end of them.
Cheers Mate
Bucky

AnswerID: 251443

Reply By: Member - Karl - Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 09:22

Monday, Jul 09, 2007 at 09:22
The rule I was taught when I did my driving courses with the Army was to keep the trailer tyres the same as your rear tyres. That is if you run 40 PSI on bitumen then 40 PSI for your trailer, if you run 25 PSI on dirt then 25 PSI for your trailer.

Whilst we didn't use campertailers, our trailers were always loaded to the hilt and I have always used this rule.

It is the same rule that you should have the same sizes rims and tyres on your trailers as your vehicle and have the same track width.

Hope this helps.

Karl
AnswerID: 251454

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