I am not trying to mislead anyone

. I read the information and it does support you technically. Legally it is pretty hard to misunderstand the bold red print that said to never run lower than the oem recomended pressure. It also said to cut (divide) the rated weight load of the oversize tires by 1. 1. If you offer up evidence it must be able to withstand discussion.
I had not even considered the legalities until after an accident this summer. One of the first things the adjuster inspected on my truck was the tire tread depth, and pressures. I assumed for value. He said for liability. After the Firestone/Explorer debacle they considered it important. I hit a 18-wheeler that backed out in front of me blind, and they were looking for any excuse to get out of the wreck.
As for something else being wrong, I don't know what. The front end was rebuilt shortly after purchase (track bar, ball joints, tie rods and brakes). Steering box and pitman were checked. New alignment. The only variable was the air pressure. Saw the difference in wear in 1200-1500 miles. Rotated tires and raised the air pressure back and tire wear evened back out. Eight months later and no change in tire wear.
The comment about our mileage with this truck was only to disclose my
limited experience compared to other members

. As with other things I've said you misunderstood my meaning and jumped to the wrong conclusions.
Sorry, if this offended any of you in some way. Nothing can be learned with only one point of view. It was an opinion and the last one I will post on this thread. Discussion is one thing, this is becoming another.