Pristine CTD. Extra cab, short bed, 2wd, SLT. Factory tow/haul package, leather heated seats, heavy insulation package. Rebuilt HX 35/40, Dap injectors, full gauges, PacBrake, Dynamic Transmission vb/servos/accumulator/strut/band/triple disc. Soft tranny lines, 40k trans cooler, lift pump, gooseneck hitch (never used), class 5 tow hitch, tonneau cover, air bags, re- geared to 3.73’s, 3rd Gen brakes with 17" rims Rust free CA truck located in Chico CA, 100 miles north of Sacto. I built this to
-
Price: 16000
-
Location: Chico CA 95973
Well after playing around with Excel and doing some thinking. I figured out how to figure exactly how much air pressure you need in each tire. The thing is that you need to get your truck weighed on a truck scale. The calculator needs front axle and rear axle weights. Then you'll need the weight rating of your tire and maximum air pressure rating. Then you plug the information into the calculator (blue boxes) and it will figure out when your optimal tire pressure is. Since I just weighed my truck I left my figures in the boxes as samples...
Information
Front Axle 4,420
Rear Axle 3,040
GAWR
Front Axle 5,200
Rear Axle 6,084
Tire
Max Tire Weight 3,042
Max Air Pressure 80 PSI
Calculation (Axle Weight / 2) / Tire Max Weight x Tire Max PSI = Inflate Pressure
Front Axle = (4,420 / 2) = 2,210 / 3,042 = 0.72 x 80 = 58 PSI
Rear Axle = (3040 / 2) = 1,520 / 3,042 = 0.49 x 80 = 40 PSI
Tire Air Pressures.xlsx