Hector the Bad
Member
- Posts
- 43
- Location
- Isle of Skye
Ok - I drive a 1987 Landrover 90 truck cab. It has just been fitted with Toyo All-Terrain 225 x 75 x R16 tyres. HMS Haddock (the name for her) is no longer used for towing heavy loads, pulling tractors and tourists' campervans out of ditches or towing anything beyond a light farm 1-ton trailer - she is retired from active service. I have just replaced all the springs and shocks with better-than-OEM which are for road use - no off-roading -. The roads here are in a terrible condition, many single-track and very bumpy. I set my tyre pressures at 30psi all-round. The new tyres are 225/75-R16 on old-fashioned plain steel rims. The inexpensive Toyo tyres are a revelation after the pretty mediocre General Grabbers they replaced. The ride is fantastic and for some reason the gearing seems smoother and crisper with the smaller diameter 225 tyres. She stops on a sixpence - very good grip at all times - unlike the GGs which were like driving a 2-ton roller-skate by comparison. If you are still awake, here's my question:
I am having to do a long road trip tomorrow for a week from the Isle of Skye to the bottom of England and obviously most of the driving is on dual carriageways and motorways. It strikes me that because the road surfaces are comparatively good, I could increase my tyre pressures significantly from their normal 30psi all-round and still have a reasonably soft ride - well, as soft as a Landy can make it. At higher tyre pressures, I am hoping to improve fuel consumption, currently 27mpg on the dreadful roads up here, falling to 24 mpg if I do a significant amount of bombing around on the even worse, heavily potholed single-track surfaces. Any suggestions and any opinions on the fuel consumption or any other side effects I should be made aware of? I can do quite high jailable speeds thanks to the diesel engine, a powerful 2.8-litre Isuzu brute of amazing strength. It goes like that stuff which is always falling off shovels.
Opinions and advice much appreciated, whoever is out there...
I am having to do a long road trip tomorrow for a week from the Isle of Skye to the bottom of England and obviously most of the driving is on dual carriageways and motorways. It strikes me that because the road surfaces are comparatively good, I could increase my tyre pressures significantly from their normal 30psi all-round and still have a reasonably soft ride - well, as soft as a Landy can make it. At higher tyre pressures, I am hoping to improve fuel consumption, currently 27mpg on the dreadful roads up here, falling to 24 mpg if I do a significant amount of bombing around on the even worse, heavily potholed single-track surfaces. Any suggestions and any opinions on the fuel consumption or any other side effects I should be made aware of? I can do quite high jailable speeds thanks to the diesel engine, a powerful 2.8-litre Isuzu brute of amazing strength. It goes like that stuff which is always falling off shovels.
Opinions and advice much appreciated, whoever is out there...