I would 1)go with the vehicle placard as the default and and limit driving until I 2)call a reputable dealership
I think it was the Ford Explorer that required lower tire pressure because the vehicle was a rollover threat at normal inflation pressures. But people were worried that the tires would blow out if under inflated. There were a ton of lawsuits.
They did a 60 minutes piece about Jeeps on this too.
Damn. I feel like 26 is pretty low. Some old threads about R50’s said they had a TSB raising it to 30 so that’s where I’m at now. Dealership said follow placard but the car is so old they don’t know or care
If there is a minimum required pressure written onto the tire, I'd go with that one. A little more than the pressure required for the car doesn't hurt.
would you be able to post a pic where it says the minimum psi on the tire? I work with tires and wheels and I have yet to see a tire with a range of psi like what you're describing and I'm curious to see.
I would set the pressure to what is listed on the placard.
usually with an 8 ply passenger tire, you shouldn't go below 20 psi.
they're for the technicians mostly. basically safe maximum levels to get the tire installed on the wheel and other safety information. sometimes you really have to inflate them when installing to get the tire to seat properly
I agree with the other poster. You should go with the minimum on the tire because it's the manufacturer's specification. You don't necessarily see that a tire is underinflated but there can still be too much stress on the sidewall.
Practically, nothing. The pressure on the sidewalk is what the manufacturer says will seat the tire on rim, but reality dictates you add pressure until the tire pops into place. That may be 40psi, but I have had to use over 100psi to get a tire to pop in place if that is what it needed and the tire lube wasn't enough and you correct to manufacturers' spec once the beat seats.
The placard is useless if the tires aren't the factory type. Don't inflate tires to less than minimum pressure if you don't know that they're the right tires for the vehicle.