Originally Posted by
Jon Wehrenberg
I am making a huge assumption here, so take my opinion with a grain of salt.
The tire companies know that heavy vehicles like ours travel north to south, south to north, they start driving when it is cold and getting warmer and they start driving when it is warm and getting colder.
If they felt that the cold tire pressure (meaning a tire that has not been recently driven) needed to reflect the outside air temperature they would have given us temperature correction values, or the charts would reflect the pressures at specific temperatures.
But they did not. They took a lot of time to develop these charts. Anyone that has looked at the charts can see clearly that they are set up in 5 PSI increments and 400 to 500 pound weight differences. If you extrapolate the weights you can get the correct pressure to the exact PSI. If they thought temperature was important there would be a note about the correction factor or like on our plane POH we would see columns for pressures based on weights and outside temperature.
So you are making a huge leap of faith by figuring when it warms up outside that the underinflated tires you started with will be at the correct pressure when it gets warm. If you want to be consistent then it follows that if you are departing FL in January, heading to the north, you should overinflate your tires. My guess is you do not do that.
I don't know the exact change in pressure per degree of temperature rise, but I would always feel more comfortable bringing my tires up to the proper pressure while cold. I know when I start out at 32 degrees with tire pressures set per the chart that when I am at 75 degrees the next day my pressures will read high, but unless I am remaining in warmer temps for a long period I will leave the tires "overinflated". I will not bleed them down if I am going back to the cold because I know they will be below the recommended pressures.