Depends on the truck in question. Listed in your owners manual and sometimes on the drivers door post.
A 'G' rating on a light truck tire means only that is a 14 ply tire. The weight capacity is dependent on the air pressure you put into the tire..
Maybe Three primary causes for truck tire failure: To low of air pressure for weight To Much weight for rating of tire Excess speed So if you over load or run a tire too fast they can fail or POP
Load ranger D on alight truck tire indicates that it is an 8 ply tire and weight capacity will be printed on sidewall. Actual load carried will depend on tire air pressure.
Load ranger D on alight truck tire indicates that it is an 8 ply tire and weight capacity will be printed on sidewall. Actual load carried will depend on tire air pressure.
A tire does not fill any faster with the weight of the car on it. Air is pressurized and fills the tire with the same speed whether it is on or off of the car.
use a tire gauge to measure that ,but it is not very much air if it's in a automobile tire.
A/P - Air Pressure .
70 psi
That really depends on the size of the tire and air in it. An average 20" tire can easily hold 200lbs of weight so long as its not horrendously over pumped.
Air pressure is a measure of how much air is in a tire, or how much it is inflated. Air pressures are written on apanel on driver door frame and on tire sidewall. they are very important to tire wear.
No, heavier by the weight of the extra air put inside it. Even if you filled the tire with helium it is still heavier, although the additional weight would be less than the additional weight of air.
That depends on how much air is in your tire. I'd reccommend going to a store and buying a Tire Pressure Guage and measuring it yourself instead of asking a complete stranger online...