The factory recommended ones of 39F and 36R, or something different? This would be for a fairly aggressively driven street DD, mostly with just me, I almost never have rear seat passengers or carry big loads. My goal would be to soften the ride a little without a significant decrease in the quickness and responsiveness of the steering. If lowering pressures affects that adversely, I'll just run what the factory suggests, but just wanted see what others were doing.My first reaction when I saw the recommended pressures of 39/36 was "Wow, that's really high." That said, I won't change that without a good reason, because I believe the engineers who designed this car knew what they were doing and clearly put a lot of thought into the details.
I searched and didn't find much on the forum on this topic, just a few discussions in the context of different factory recommendations for the US 4-door vs. the rest of the world's 2-door.
NOTE- That's cold pressures, taken after the car has sat for at least a few hours, more normally overnight.
I searched and didn't find much on the forum on this topic, just a few discussions in the context of different factory recommendations for the US 4-door vs. the rest of the world's 2-door.
NOTE- That's cold pressures, taken after the car has sat for at least a few hours, more normally overnight.