182 STOL driver wrote:I carry one of those little battery powered tire inflation that will go up to 100+ psi. Landing on too low a air pressure is damaging and could be fatal mistake. Most mains (6x6) will still be ok down to 20 psi- I wouldn't go any lower. Mid to high 30's is about right. I run my 700's around 35 psi and they work well.
The soft field (Alaska Bush wheel) tires are mid teens I think.
I tried two different 12V tire inflators, each of them self destructed after a couple of uses. The problem I see with them is that the smallest ones all seem to be cheap pieces of crap, and if you get a good one, it weighs a ton. I gravitated towards the manual bike pump because I perceived it to be very reliable and very lightweight. I hate the concept of the CO2 cartridges because I know I'll push it cockeyed onto the valve stem, discharge it with most of it going into the atmosphere, and then have to kick the dog a couple of times before stomping back to civilization.
The POH for my '59 172 (2200 lbs. gw) states 26 psi in the mains, 23 psi in the nose. I'm guessing that due to the prevalence of grass strips in the fifties they picked those numbers as a good all-around pressure. When I'm running on pavement, I like to keep them around 30. When I have them down to 20, I'm at 1900 lbs.