Which causes more strain on the drive train and axle components? If I’m on an obstacle that I can’t get up at 10 psi locked, should I air down to 6psi to get more traction or bump it? Which is easier on the drivetrain and axle components?
The question is more complicated and more interesting than that. You are getting into the aired down tire territory where at some point the tire contact patch starts to cup in the center resulting in less contact than a slightly higher psi. Less contact and less sidewall support makes things squirrelly and unpredictable.
The question is more complicated and more interesting than that. You are getting into the aired down tire territory where at some point the tire contact patch starts to cup in the center resulting in less contact than a slightly higher psi. Less contact and less sidewall support makes things squirrelly and unpredictable.
We’ve worked out that a 17” provides more stability than a 15”, so what is the ideal psi for traction? In other words, at what psi does cupping start occurring so there is no more traction to gain?
Yep, too low can actually hurt you. I've been there and done that.
A lot of unkowns on the bump too, are we talking a Basket/Nashville send it bump?
Right air pressure and crawling should be less problematic than a bump
Depends on the tire, wheel, vehicle weight, etc. Though, I believe it to be somewhere around 8psi within a narrow range. This means that when you find it, it would be wise to recheck the tire psi throughout the day to adjust for ambient temps and tire temps.
I've seen more than a few that need this in the rig, outside the rig, and then a reverse tattoo on their forehead so the reminder works when they look in the mirror.How many trail recoveries are preceded by the following words...
When in doubt, throttle out..
Hold my beer and watch this...
-Mac
Before I had beadlocks, I would air down to 15 PSI and could tell the tire was begging to be lower PSI. Black Friday will be my first run with beadlocks so it will be trial and error for me. I'm going to start at 8 PSI and work down from there.
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I think it depends on the wheels and the tires. I popped a bead on my old wheels at 10 PSI.FWiW, I have been airing down to 8psi on non-beadlock wheels for many years. The only time I lost beads were on high traction surfaces while turning with the rear axle locked.
I think it depends on the wheels and the tires. I popped a bead on my old wheels at 10 PSI.
Tolerances. I'm not saying you need beadlocks, but they do help get lower pressure.Under what circumstances? And even then, so what? Reseating a tire is generally not a big deal.
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Part of me wants to say that getting beadlocks and airing down sub 10psi will give greater traction and allow me to crawl over obstacles easier so I don’t have to bump and endanger components. Another part of me is sayin, “but the increased traction will increase the forces on my driveline and axle components,” so which inflicts greater forces? Bumping responsibly or airing down more? Or is it a wash and don’t worry about it?
The more control and stability you can build into the rig, the better you can utilize the available traction and momentum. A simple change to 17" wheels will accomplish some of this due to the improved stability of the tire allowing you to take more advantage of the optimal tire pressure.
Then factor in multiple aspects like sway bars, shocks, steering, transmission, etc and you get a compounding effect in the amount of control you have as the various systems start working together in more predictable ways.