RFTs to non RFTs = same tyre pressures?

RFTs to non RFTs = same tyre pressures?

Author
Discussion

g3org3y

Original Poster:

21,577 posts

206 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
Bit of advice please chaps,

When changing from factory RFTs to non RFTs, does one keep the tyres pressures as per factory spec or should they be bumped up a bit to compensate for the softer sidewall of the the non RFTs (relative to the RFTs)?

FWIW, this is on my 630i which was only available on RFTs from the factory.

Court_S

14,322 posts

192 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
I was told by Birds to stick the the same pressures, which I do on my 130 with their B1 kit.

jon-

16,533 posts

231 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
Generally yes, though you can check your handbook to ensure there's no separate pressure listed.

Most people do like to up the pressures by 1-2 psi so the difference in handling isn't quite as stark, but that's a personal preference.

Radec

4,967 posts

62 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
Kept them the same when I had my E90.

First thing I did when I bought it and felt miles better on non-rfts.

However that was many years ago, I'm not sure how tech has progressed with rfts or they feel just as bad.

g3org3y

Original Poster:

21,577 posts

206 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies guys. thumbup

jon-

16,533 posts

231 months

Monday 25th October 2021
quotequote all
Radec said:
However that was many years ago, I'm not sure how tech has progressed with rfts or they feel just as bad.
They're still pretty trash.

vikingaero

11,926 posts

184 months

Tuesday 26th October 2021
quotequote all
jon- said:
Radec said:
However that was many years ago, I'm not sure how tech has progressed with rfts or they feel just as bad.
They're still pretty trash.
I would concur - I first had RFTs on my 2001 MINI Cooper and they were harsh as hell. Over the years I've driven many model of cars with RFT and they are still poor - if anything the improvement has been in isolating NVH rather than the tyres.