Should you deflate your tires before driving on the beach?

Dear Car Talk | Jul 01, 1999
Dear Tom and Ray:
the advice to deflate the tires before going on the beach. This sounds crazy and illogical to me, and I?-m an engineer by training. I asked her if she has some kind of
device to pump the tires back up when she leaves the beach and wants to drive on the interstate for hundreds of miles to get home. If you DO recommend the deflation
procedure, how much air do you take out? We need to know soon because we are going to a beach house this summer that you can only get to by driving on the beach,
and neither of us wants to listen to "I told you so." -- Bob
TOM: Well, Bob, since you seem so comfortable throwing around that engineering credential, I'm sure you're quite used to learning that you're wrong.
RAY: Your girlfriend is absolutely right. The reason you deflate your tires before driving on the beach is because it gives you a wider, softer "footprint" in the sand.
And the more actual rubber you can put on the sand, the better your chances of NOT getting stuck.
TOM: How much air to let out differs from car to car and from tire to tire. Generally speaking, the bigger the tire, the flatter it can run. If I had to guess, I'd say you
could run your Jeep on the beach with 12 to 15 pounds of air in the tires, as long as you don't go too fast or too far. But I?-d check with a dealer to be sure.
RAY: You ARE right, Bob, to be concerned about reinflating the tires (we're trying to help you save face here, buddy). If you get back on paved roads with 15 pounds
of air in each tire, you'll surely damage the tires AND the rims. So you have to have some way to reinflate the tires when you get off the beach.
TOM: A portable, car battery-powered air pump is one possibility. A gas station very near the beach access (that you can limp to) is another.
RAY: You might try to contact the owners of the beach house and find out how they deal with this issue, since they obviously have to get to their house and back. They
may have a routine that works for them that you could learn something from.
TOM: That'll be better than stopping the first guy you pass on the beach and asking, "How much air should I let out of my tires?" -- only to find out that when you get
the answer, you're already up to your axles in sand.
the advice to deflate the tires before going on the beach. This sounds crazy and illogical to me, and I?-m an engineer by training. I asked her if she has some kind of
device to pump the tires back up when she leaves the beach and wants to drive on the interstate for hundreds of miles to get home. If you DO recommend the deflation
procedure, how much air do you take out? We need to know soon because we are going to a beach house this summer that you can only get to by driving on the beach,
and neither of us wants to listen to "I told you so." -- Bob
TOM: Well, Bob, since you seem so comfortable throwing around that engineering credential, I'm sure you're quite used to learning that you're wrong.
RAY: Your girlfriend is absolutely right. The reason you deflate your tires before driving on the beach is because it gives you a wider, softer "footprint" in the sand.
And the more actual rubber you can put on the sand, the better your chances of NOT getting stuck.
TOM: How much air to let out differs from car to car and from tire to tire. Generally speaking, the bigger the tire, the flatter it can run. If I had to guess, I'd say you
could run your Jeep on the beach with 12 to 15 pounds of air in the tires, as long as you don't go too fast or too far. But I?-d check with a dealer to be sure.
RAY: You ARE right, Bob, to be concerned about reinflating the tires (we're trying to help you save face here, buddy). If you get back on paved roads with 15 pounds
of air in each tire, you'll surely damage the tires AND the rims. So you have to have some way to reinflate the tires when you get off the beach.
TOM: A portable, car battery-powered air pump is one possibility. A gas station very near the beach access (that you can limp to) is another.
RAY: You might try to contact the owners of the beach house and find out how they deal with this issue, since they obviously have to get to their house and back. They
may have a routine that works for them that you could learn something from.
TOM: That'll be better than stopping the first guy you pass on the beach and asking, "How much air should I let out of my tires?" -- only to find out that when you get
the answer, you're already up to your axles in sand.
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