Stock tire PSI for the Speed 3?

Andrade08

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MazdaSpeed3 2008 Cosmic Blue
I just put my OE wheels and tires back on yesterday because the snow of old man winter is over. I went to pump them with air and noticed that Mazda wants 34psi front and 32psi rear! The tires have a max PSI rating of 50psi. The #s look low? What do you guys run in your tires? I am **not** looking for max traction or ride comfort. I am looking for the tires to last as long as possible and the least rolling resistance on the freeway. My ride to work is 38 miles one way all freeway 70mph. I normally just run the max PSI on the tire on my cars. I have done that for 16 years with great results. But 50psi seems high and 34 psi seems low? I have the fronts at 44psi right now and the backs at 42psi and the fronts still seem too low but the rear looks to be inflated nice. The ride is still fine. OK that is my Q.. :)
 
The pressure you should use is posted by the mazda folks on the inside of the door. The tire pressure max is just a reference to the tire only, not the car it is on. You might want to get a little closer to the 34 psi. The tire's traction changes alot with pressure. For a daily driver you can up it a couple pounds for gas mileage but be careful stopping in the rain. Just a suggestion 08. thinking about your safety is all.
 
Thanks for the reply. It is just that at 34 PSI the front tires look like they are going flat???
 
Thanks for the reply. It is just that at 34 PSI the front tires look like they are going flat???

That's what you get with low profile. I'm not sure, but 50 PSI max tire rating, that's probably after the tire heat's up as well. I don't know how many PSIs a tire will gain after heat-up, maybe +/- 4 PSI??

I personally wouldn't go over 36/38 PSI
 
50psi would be for maximum pressure for the tire. GO by the specs on the door frame. That's manufacturer recommended. Tire pressures are ALWAYS measured cold. It would be 50psi cold.
 
My SS requires 32 psi all the way around. It suggests that if i'm going to be driving in excess of 90mph, to up the rear air pressure to 38 psi. I run 35 psi all the way around and have gotten the best possible gas mileage.

I'm assuming that's why they want the front wheels at a higher PSI (higher speeds). Not to mention, you have more weight in the front with the engine + trans. If the rears were at the same pressure, or higher, i'd also assume you'd risk throwing the rear end out in harder cornering. With lower pressure, the tirewalls will roll a little more to forgive any overcorrections.
 
at 44psi the center of your tread will be gone very quickly follow the recommended specs they are there for a reason
 
I used 34 F and 32 R...always checked cold and rotated approx. every 3000 miles = over 25K on the stock tires.
And yes, I do force the traction a bit.
 
Maybe it's my opinion only, but I don't think it's that necessary to rotate every 3000 miles. That's a bit over the top don't you think? Maybe every 7,000 miles? Do you get your alignment done every 3k too? That makes a big difference on how the tires wear too.
 
All I am saying is.....my practice netted 25K on these tires on the stock alignment. One was feathered towards the end and I chalk that up to alignment.

Rotating tires on this car is a snap. And you can do it with JUST your scissor jack.
 
I used 34 F and 32 R...always checked cold and rotated approx. every 3000 miles = over 25K on the stock tires.
And yes, I do force the traction a bit.

I sold my stock tires with 12k on them. They still had 6/32nds at the lower point. I could have easily gotten 25k out of them. I rotate every 5k during my oil change. My 235/40s look new after another 12k. Chewed to s*** from the inside of my rear fenders.....but the tread is great!
 
All I am saying is.....my practice netted 25K on these tires on the stock alignment. One was feathered towards the end and I chalk that up to alignment.

Rotating tires on this car is a snap. And you can do it with JUST your scissor jack.


When rotating the stock tires, do the driver side tires stay on the driver's side of the car only? Or can you do a cross over i.e. Driver side front to passenger side rear? Wondering because of the tred...?

Thanks!
 
I could be wrong, but I think they actually have directional indicators on them.
I thought most tires have this due to the way the belts wear.
If I wanted to switch sides, I would have to unmount and remount.
 
put your glasses on and look harder!



I have not looked yet...when I get to the house and have a beer in hand, I shall do a walk around.

I will also look at that damn Owner's manual that is taking up space in my glove box. It usually has more info than I need.
 
I say go with what the factory suggest.

I don't understand why people inflate their tires based on the max psi the tire can handle. Over pressuring tires will lead to premature wear and higher chances damaging tires when you hit a pot hole or a dip.

The factory gives you suggested specs based on thier testings ... i assume its based on the weight distrubution and size of the tires. Once your tire gets up to temp, your psi will raise around 4 or 5 psi.

the tire may look like its flat but look at it from the face of the tread, there is more of a contact patch which will give you better traction. You can up the psi a couple to get the steering more responsive and better mpg, but to me 44 psi is too excessive based on the recommended psi.
 
I usually give the front 36 and back 34 to give it better MPG and response. Hot days I would sometimes raise both by 2 PSI.
 

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