dirtyoldman
I'm now on Medicare,officially old.
305/70R16 GY Silent Armor M/S ''E''s,45-50psi.Because the Burb is so heavy the ride is pretty good 
I don't think I'll ever run mine @ 35 again. The guys that installed my wheels/tires (RimzOneOnline.com) set them @ 45 when they put them on. My mechanic dropped them down (without me knowing) to 35 at the first oil change/rotation after installing them. I only realized it after a while because the outsides were wearing where they weren't supposed to, which is why I raised it back up.She said 35psi with the RARE occasion of adjusting MAYBE 2-3 psi up or down BUT STRONGLY suggested 35psi at all times.
She said 35psi with the RARE occasion of adjusting MAYBE 2-3 psi up or down BUT STRONGLY suggested 35psi at all times.
I don't think I'll ever run mine @ 35 again. The guys that installed my wheels/tires (RimzOneOnline.com) set them @ 45 when they put them on. My mechanic dropped them down (without me knowing) to 35 at the first oil change/rotation after installing them. I only realized it after a while because the outsides were wearing where they weren't supposed to, which is why I raised it back up.
I'm not arguing Toyo's recommendation as I'm sure there's a good zone one can be in, but I don't see myself running these 33" Toyos at the same pressure as the tiny tires on my mother's Camry (~1/2 the weight), especially when they start showing signs of under-inflation at that pressure.
Do what you think is best for your truck, and your wallet, but I'd also strongly suggest doing some serious research on places like tirerack.com and find out the truth about proper inflation pressures. Don't just take my word, or the word of someone else, look it up yourself so you get a better understanding of it.

No doubt, man, I'm always willing to learn something new or re-learn something. I agree with what you said earlier about the pressure being what holds the vehicle up. With that being the case, though, like I said, my mother's Camry weighs about 1/2 what my truck does and it runs with 35 psi.Please don't take this as an "I told you so" but, a serious question.Perhaps Y'all know a different question to ask them that would garner a different answer for diferent applications.

I've been wanting to do that, but have also been too lazy to do so.I read somewhere (maybe even here) about drawing a chalk line on your tire. Then drive a bit, and see how the chalk wore off. Always seems like a good idea, but I still haven't busted out the chalk.![]()
I read somewhere (maybe even here) about drawing a chalk line on your tire. Then drive a bit, and see how the chalk wore off. Always seems like a good idea, but I still haven't busted out the chalk.![]()
No doubt, man, I'm always willing to learn something new or re-learn something. I agree with what you said earlier about the pressure being what holds the vehicle up. With that being the case, though, like I said, my mother's Camry weighs about 1/2 what my truck does and it runs with 35 psi.
Heck, for trial's sake I'll set my tires down to 35 psi for a while and see how it turns out.![]()
