When they strap them down, they don't want the tires getting squashed flat and possibly damaged so they overinflate them. I've been told that this was more important when shipping vehicles overseas but I guess they do it for truck shipments too.What does shipping have to do with tire pressures? Maybe if they were filled with helium, it would be easier on the truck haulers.
Well, got the PDI from service manager and of course tire pressure box was checked. Which tells me that there could be much more on that list that is checked off but really wasn’t actually inspected. Lost trust in that service department.this is all BS. The pressure in the tires should be caught during the pre-delivery inspection. No one has an excuse. This is a service department fail, and they need to be pointed out.
Do yourself a favour. Don’t talk to that guy again. Ever. About anything.Soooo thanks to great forums like this, I read the Tacoma’s come in with over-inflated (50 psi) for shipping purposes and a bunch of you guys said before you drive off check psi. Welp in all the excitement I forgot. Get home to see I’m at 50 psi. I text my sales dude about it and see attached. My local tire guy said NO that’s too much.
I had my PDI sent to me before I took delivery. Everything had been checked even options the truck didn’t have. I brought a gauge and air the tires down from 50 psi in front of the sales person. Then I insisted they bring the the truck back to service and check the diffentials and transmission fluid levels.There is a PDI checklist, if you really want to bust their chops, ask to see it.