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Tire Pressure for 2007 IMpala SS?

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rbrow53
3/18/2007 11:58:30 AM
    Manual says tires should be 32psi all for all. Some sites have said that 32psi is too low and others have said that the front should be 2psi higher than the rear for the front wheel drive 2007 Impala SS. Anyone have experience or recommendation for correct psi?,,,thnx
art
3/19/2007 1:32:25 AM
The drivers side door sticker on my 06 SS indicates 30 psi for all 4 tires, but I think that is to low and run 35 psi in all the tires.  The door sticker will tell you tire pressures and other stuff relevent to your own car.   It seemed to help the gas mileage just a little bit.  Are you having any problems with range on your remote control and remote start?  I'm down to about 20-30 feet at best and they advertise it to work up to 200 ft. but mine has never worked over 50 ft.  Let me know, if you would, my car is in the dealership now and I'm trying to get them to fix it.
engine2
3/19/2007 2:40:47 AM
art is correct, its in your drivers door jamb for recommended PSI.   I have been told to not go over 10% of recommended PSI.
rbrow53
3/19/2007 8:42:53 AM
    Thanks for the response. The tire pressure on the placard says 32 psi for front and back tires. I feel that's a little low......I will try 35psi for awhile. I have only had my SS since 2/27/07 and so far havent had any problem with range for the remote locks or the remote starter although its not anywhere near 200'.....more like 75'. let me know how you make out at the dealer...thnx again
rbarrios
3/19/2007 4:03:03 PM
we picked up our 07 on march 5. it has a build date of Feb 12. our remote and related stuff is working fine.
do you know if your car was recently delivered to dealer or had been sitting around?
rbrow53
3/19/2007 4:47:11 PM
Mine was sitting at a dealer...build date was 11/06. I really have enjoyed mine for the short time that I have owned it........ I find excuses to drive it.
art
3/19/2007 11:21:48 PM
If you are new to driving an SS, be careful the first time you really floor board it!!  Have it pointed in a straight line and hang on as the torque steer is a little surprising until you get used to it.  Hard acceleration while turning can be scary.  The car handles a lot differently during hard acceleration from either a dead stop or slow speed start  depending on wheather the "Traction Control" is on or off.  With "Traction Control" off it will really burn up the tires, but probably doesn't accelerate any faster or as fast as it does with "Traction Control" on .  We had an ice storm last month and the "Traction Control" on ice was great.  I accelerated hard one time to see what it would do and the engine barely speeded up and the tires hardly spun at all, even on 100% ice.  It very smoothly accelerated up to 25 mph at which time I let off of it because it wasn't safe beyond that speed on the ice.  Great traction on the ice, even on hills, rear wheel cars won't do that.
rbrow53
3/20/2007 8:41:45 AM
Thanks for the heads up. I have been running with traction control off....seems to reduce torque steer and handle better, but then we don't have too many ice storms in Florida. What pressure are you running in your tires?
art
3/20/2007 10:45:26 PM
Rbrow53 I'm running 35 psi.  Looked at my door sticker again and it indicates 32 psi not 30 psi as I put in a previous post.  If these tires are like most tires they are good up to 44 psi if needed, but that is not needed on the Impala because there is not that much weight.  I have a couple of utility trailers that have auto type tires and they all indicate they are good up to 44 psi and that is where I run them because of the weight I carry in them and have not had a problem doing so. 
rbrow53
3/21/2007 1:02:54 AM
Art, did you notice any improvement in handling or the ride when you raised the pressure to 35psi? Mine feels a little soft when I take corners a little fast...thnx
art
3/22/2007 2:13:24 AM
Rbrow53 I noticed it is a tiny bit firmer over bumps but not much.  Our temperatures swing so much here, sometimes 40 to 60 degrees in one day, that I decided to carry a little extra to compensate for those occassional very cold mornings when the tires might actually be underflated.  For every 10 degrees of temperature loss, you will loose 1 pound of pressure from your tires, so I could have 4 to 6 pounds of tire pressure change in just one
day account of the weather. 
9C1
6/3/2007 5:48:05 AM
I bought my son a 2001 police Impals last year with 40,000 miles on it . I had to replace the tires when I bought it and the tire dealer told us he recommends 35 psi for all passenger vehicles. He's been using that and had no problems.
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