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Tyre pressure for Yaris 2019


sufy
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That's the tyre pressure for your car, didn't need to ask then. 

For my MK3 2016, had it 35/36 psi all around, which suited the road condition I was driving in. 

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11 minutes ago, sufy said:

What does this mean then?

 

 

PXL_20230827_102203600.jpg

It means those are the pressures you should inflate your tyres too. The top figure is for a lightly loaded car and the dark figure is for a fully loaded car.

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27 minutes ago, CPN said:

31/31 psi front, 29/29 psi rear

I've just done filled the pressure up to these. Will it be okay?

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14 minutes ago, sufy said:

I've just done filled the pressure up to these. Will it be okay?

As previous poster informed you that's the advised tyre pressure for your car on your door pillar. some are a little different from others, I suppose that depends on the type of tyres fitted to your car. The numbers you are interested in are the ones to the right of the / which is in PSI. The ones with the black background are for when the car is fully loaded. Remember tyres must be checked preferably in the morning when tyres are cold.

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53 minutes ago, sufy said:

What does this mean then?

 

 

PXL_20230827_102203600.jpg

As has already been pointed out, those are the advisory figures for your car and since you have 15" wheels (which I didn't know you had) are different from what I quoted you because those were for my car which has 17" wheels...

 

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33 minutes ago, sufy said:

I've just done filled the pressure up to these. Will it be okay?

No, since your 15" tyres require a higher pressure (as per the label you quoted).

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Just now, CPN said:

No, since your 15" tyres require a higher pressure (as per the label you quoted).

Damn. Already filled up to that. Will it be okay as can't fill up again 

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1 minute ago, sufy said:

Damn. Already filled up to that. Will it be okay as can't fill up again 

They'll be fine. (only 2psi front & 3psi rear difference) Bear in mind that once you have been driving for a few miles and the tyres have heated up, they'll go up by 2-3 psi anyway but make sure you put them to the correct pressures (cold if you can) next time you are able.

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Just now, CPN said:

They'll be fine. (only 2psi front & 3psi rear difference) Bear in mind that once you have been driving for a few miles and the tyres have heated up, they'll go up by 2-3 psi anyway but make sure you put them to the correct pressures (cold if you can) next time you are able.

But then why did you tell me them them pressures to fill up lol

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2 minutes ago, sufy said:

But then why did you tell me them them pressures to fill up lol

Simply because I made an assumption about the size of your wheels based on my own cars (my previous 2017 Yaris Excel had 16" wheels/tyres, and my current Mk4 has 17") and at that point, you didn't post the picture of your glove box label which would have helped in the first place. 😉

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I have the 15" on mine 36 in the fronts and 32-33 in the rear, "just a few PSI" makes a difference to the car, 35 - 36 in the rear with a full load

Don't forget to reset the tpms after doing the tire pressures  (button on the lower trim above the brake pedal)

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I used to think the show-me tell-me questions on the driving test were just a silly needless addition, but we seem to get some many asking basic questions like this now I'm starting to reconsider my opinion!! :wacko:

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CPN you are a very patient man. Tyre pressure varies throughout model variations, this model of Yaris is a serial offender complicated by the fact that the information is hidden in the glovebox🫠

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1 hour ago, Liamtof said:

CPN you are a very patient man. Tyre pressure varies throughout model variations, this model of Yaris is a serial offender complicated by the fact that the information is hidden in the glovebox🫠

On my Mk4, it is also on the driver's door pillar and I'm pretty sure it was the same on my Mk3...

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It's either in the glovebox or the driver-side B-pillar on virtually every Toyota ever made to my knowledge!

 

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1 hour ago, Cyker said:

I used to think the show-me tell-me questions on the driving test were just a silly needless addition, but we seem to get some many asking basic questions like this now I'm starting to reconsider my opinion!! :wacko:

I remember a tale from a motorcycle instructor who had gone through the Cardington exam.

Apparently there was one examiner there who enjoyed asking the candidates to treat him as a learner, and ask what was the procedure for stopping the bike.

Well the candidates duly ran through the braking, taking out of gear, and making sure it was safe to stop in that place etc.

And then promptly keeled over on his side to the amazement of the candidate.

"Well, you didn't tell me to put my foot on the floor did you?"

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It is difficult to gauge the level and offer appropriate instruction - e.g. in my work I get such a range of skill levels where my instructions could range from, Run Microsoft Word to Move the mouse cursor, yes the arrow, onto that icon, yes the little pictures, no not that one, the one next to it, the one that looks like a W, yes that one, now double-click on it, no, press the left mouse button, twice, in quick succession, yes it didn't work because you moved the mouse when your pressed the button, move the cursor, yes the arrow, over the W icon again, hold it still over it and try again etc. :wacko:

There are some people that I swear you'd have to tell them to breathe in and out or they'd suffocate! :eek: 

 

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8 minutes ago, Cyker said:

It is difficult to gauge the level and offer appropriate instruction - e.g. in my work I get such a range of skill levels where my instructions could range from, Run Microsoft Word to Move the mouse cursor, yes the arrow, onto that icon, yes the little pictures, no not that one, the one next to it, the one that looks like a W, yes that one, now double-click on it, no, press the left mouse button, twice, in quick succession, yes it didn't work because you moved the mouse when your pressed the button, move the cursor, yes the arrow, over the W icon again, hold it still over it and try again etc. :wacko:

There are some people that I swear you'd have to tell them to breathe in and out or they'd suffocate! :eek: 

 

OMG! You just described my normal working day a few years back!!🤣

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13 minutes ago, Cyker said:

It is difficult to gauge the level and offer appropriate instruction - e.g. in my work I get such a range of skill levels where my instructions could range from, Run Microsoft Word to Move the mouse cursor, yes the arrow, onto that icon, yes the little pictures, no not that one, the one next to it, the one that looks like a W, yes that one, now double-click on it, no, press the left mouse button, twice, in quick succession, yes it didn't work because you moved the mouse when your pressed the button, move the cursor, yes the arrow, over the W icon again, hold it still over it and try again etc. :wacko:

There are some people that I swear you'd have to tell them to breathe in and out or they'd suffocate! :eek: 

 

I thought a cursor was a swear word🤭, by the sounds of it I bet you've used it a few times.😂

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16 minutes ago, CPN said:

OMG! You just described my normal working day a few years back!!🤣

My condolences! :sad: :laugh: 

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6 hours ago, Stivino said:

The top figure is for a lightly loaded car and the dark figure is for a fully loaded car.

 

6 hours ago, Bernard Foy said:

The ones with the black background are for when the car is fully loaded. 

No! Both wrong. Look at the picture again.

 

6 hours ago, sufy said:

What does this mean then?

Top ones are for up to 5 people with luggage. Lower figures in black surround are for economy.

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5 hours ago, sufy said:

Already filled up to that. Will it be okay as can't fill up again 

If you are just doing general running around it'll be fine. If you are going on a longer motorway run then I'd get them set right before that.

Also those are cold pressures. If you can't do them cold you'll need to add a pound or two. (If you can get a decent gauge then you can overinflate a bit where you fill them warm and then when you are somewhere convenient, like home or work, and they are cold, drop them down to the right values.)

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