Depends on the make, model, and year. Look in the owner's manual or on the driver's door post.
To crush a small to mid size car it takes roughly 2300 psi. If you want to crush a big truck, SUV, or bigger vehicle you will need more than 2400 psi.
Depends on the size of the tire and the weight of the vehicle. Wide tires on a light vehicle=lower psi Skinny tires on a heavy vehicle=higher psi
That will depend on the application and weight rating of the tire. A passenger car tire would be about 35 psi. A truck tire would be 80 psi.
40 - 80 psi at idle, depending on what the engine is.
4.3L = 60 to 66 psi. 2.2L = 41 to 47 psi.
That depends on the tire. We have a Cobalt which only requires 44 psi. But the truck I drive at work requires 130 psi in the tires. There isn't one universal answer to this question.
It will depend on the application. 30 psi on a smaller vehicle and 80+ on a truck.
Not enough info to answer. You didn't tell us the area of the contact surface, which we'd need to know in order to calculate it.
output is 2 to 7 psi.
As a truck driver we have a gauge inside that we can monitor. the compressor will build up to 120 125 psi, depending on load we run 30 to 100 psi I am sure they can take the full 125 PSI with no problems at all. They are in fact rated at 150 psi
9 to 13 PSI.
No, 2005 makes 60+psi, 1991 is 15 psi.