They need to take it into account for on-road trucks, too. No one wants to run 80 psi in the rear of an empty truck. It is like driving on basketballs. But it is not really FCA's fault, it is the fault of our government, their desire to regulate anything and everything, their innate incompetence, and their zeal to levy ridiculously heavy fines against those who defy their ridiculous regulations. I can't blame FCA for being scared to defy this law, however stupid it may be. I lived with that idiot warning and light for a long time and got used to it. I wasn't happy about it but I lived with it. The only people it really bothered were those who borrowed my truck. Luckily, though, I got in under the wire on getting the pressures reduced so I no longer have the warning. I hope you are able to find someone who will do the same for you.
We can't blame the gubment entirely. We have a population, and a news media that cries "How could this have been prevented!", and "what are you (the gubment) going to do about this!" after almost every major, or repeated accident.
...my tires air pressure is checked every month and inflated accordingly to the pressure gage. I have been doing this since I started driving my vehicles back in the 60's.
Just my $0.02
FYI, you can try the trick the boy's with the mud trucks around here have been doing for years. Take out the sensors, put in regular valve stems, and put all the sensors inside your spare tire. You can't use it anyway, if your using larger than stock tires. If they want a spare they bed mount one the same size as on the truck. Don't know if this would work on the newer trucks or not. If you didn't want to use your spare, find one of those 80psi space saver spares and throw them in it.
EXACTLY!! Why did I not think of this!!!!
Other brands and vehicles have figured this out....why can't fca? I was able to turn off TPMS on my Jeep Wrangler....why hasn't the aftermarket been able to figure this out? A brand new truck, designed to go off-road, with a flashing TPMS warning light is ridiculous in my opinion.
Flash
Because I hear it
does not work on the newer trucks. From what I have read, the system needs to see the sensors moving. I have not tried it, just relaying what I have read.
The worst part to me is having my EVIC default to the tire pressure screen at each start up. Yes, mildly annoying, but certainly nothing that makes me over-look all of the goodness of the truck.
How much below 65 psi? I'm sure they've programmed a margin of error to account for temperature changes.
In my case, the system wants to see 80 psi in the rear. I run around 55.
Actually, I picked up a bolt in the left rear on one of my short trips and PSI was in the high 40s before the light came on to tell me about the pressure change, but most likely the light came on when PSI crossed the 50 PSI threshold. .
80 PSI is ridiculous and I have yet to see where any forum member of any forum, or anyone else for that matter, produced a federal code that states minimum PSI for any tire on any light duty pick-up. If one demands 80 PSI, then FoMoCo is breaking the law.
And I think Ram would also be hard pressed to get that PSI recommendation from any tire engineer too.
80 PSI is ridiculous and I have yet to see where any forum member of any forum, or anyone else for that matter, produced a federal code that states minimum PSI for any tire on any light duty pick-up. If one demands 80 PSI, then FoMoCo is breaking the law.