E-Class (W214) 2024 -

E53 tire pressure

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Rate Thread
 
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 09:45 AM
  #1  
Rick_H's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Liked
 
Joined: Nov 2024
Posts: 43
Likes: 12
From: Virginia
2025 E53
E53 tire pressure

I was getting a "front" tire pressure warning last week and I spent some time over the weekend and failed to get rid of it. The warning says to refer to the recommended psi inside the gas cap. I have 21" wheels and the tires recommend 40psi. The sticker inside the door says 44psi. The sticker inside the gas cap says 39-44psi. Over the weekend I adjusted the psi anywhere from 36-44psi and am still getting the warning light. If I remember correctly, I think the original psi was around 44 before I got the warning light, but not totally sure. Which makes me think, why would I want to run 44psi when the tire says 40psi? Any recommendations, or anyone running 21" wheels can you tell me what your current tire pressure is for you fronts tires? Thanks!



Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 09:54 AM
  #2  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by Rick_H
I was getting a "front" tire pressure warning last week and I spent some time over the weekend and failed to get rid of it. The warning says to refer to the recommended psi inside the gas cap. I have 21" wheels and the tires recommend 40psi. The sticker inside the door says 44psi. The sticker inside the gas cap says 39-44psi. Over the weekend I adjusted the psi anywhere from 36-44psi and am still getting the warning light. If I remember correctly, I think the original psi was around 44 before I got the warning light, but not totally sure. Which makes me think, why would I want to run 44psi when the tire says 40psi? Any recommendations, or anyone running 21" wheels can you tell me what your current tire pressure is for you fronts tires? Thanks!



The PSI on the gas flap is for cold tire pressure and should be used. This has been discussed in numerous threads. After adjusting the tire pressure as per the cap, reset the tire pressure. Your warning light should then go out.

Hope this helps.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 10:17 AM
  #3  
regor60's Avatar
Super Member
20 Year Member
 
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 783
Likes: 22
From: Atlanta
06 E55 Black
Originally Posted by Rick_H
I was getting a "front" tire pressure warning last week and I spent some time over the weekend and failed to get rid of it. The warning says to refer to the recommended psi inside the gas cap. I have 21" wheels and the tires recommend 40psi. The sticker inside the door says 44psi. The sticker inside the gas cap says 39-44psi. Over the weekend I adjusted the psi anywhere from 36-44psi and am still getting the warning light. If I remember correctly, I think the original psi was around 44 before I got the warning light, but not totally sure. Which makes me think, why would I want to run 44psi when the tire says 40psi? Any recommendations, or anyone running 21" wheels can you tell me what your current tire pressure is for you fronts tires? Thanks!



Nevermind

Last edited by regor60; Jun 2, 2025 at 10:21 AM.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 10:30 AM
  #4  
OldManAndHisCar's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Jun 2021
Posts: 3,110
Likes: 1,346
From: Fleriduh
W212 E63S Wagon - GSL580 - E63 - E350 - C300
You go by the fuel tank sticker...and from there, assuming you are not on Run Flats (ditch em if you are :-) ....I go to the high end to protect my rims.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 10:33 AM
  #5  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by OldManAndHisCar
You go by the fuel tank sticker...and from there, assuming you are not on Run Flats (ditch em if you are :-) ....I go to the high end to protect my rims.
The pressure for non RF and RF are the same.

Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 11:00 AM
  #6  
L1Wolf's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Veteran: Army
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,908
Likes: 665
From: Tennessee
W214 E450
To add to what has already been said, the tires do not have a "recommended" tire pressure on them. At least I've never seen one that does. What is on the physical tires is the max pressure. If the gas tank flap is saying a higher pressure than the max pressure of the actual tire something is wrong. Are you saying that the tires themselves have a max pressure of 40psi? Seems pretty low for a max psi of a tire.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 11:10 AM
  #7  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by L1Wolf
To add to what has already been said, the tires do not have a "recommended" tire pressure on them. At least I've never seen one that does. What is on the physical tires is the max pressure. If the gas tank flap is saying a higher pressure than the max pressure of the actual tire something is wrong. Are you saying that the tires themselves have a max pressure of 40psi? Seems pretty low for a max psi of a tire.
You are correct: there is only a max pressure on the tire, not a recommended pressure.

The same tire can often be found on different vehicles so a "recommended" pressure is not possible, as each manufacturer determines the ideal tire pressure for their cars.

I have never seen a situation where the recommended pressure as found on the gas flap, exceeds the maximum pressure on the tire.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 11:23 AM
  #8  
L1Wolf's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Veteran: Army
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,908
Likes: 665
From: Tennessee
W214 E450
Originally Posted by JTK44
You are correct: there is only a max pressure on the tire, not a recommended pressure.

The same tire can often be found on different vehicles so a "recommended" pressure is not possible, as each manufacturer determines the ideal tire pressure for their cars.

I have never seen a situation where the recommended pressure as found on the gas flap, exceeds the maximum pressure on the tire.
I haven't either. If it does, then it is likely that the wrong tires are on the car. I doubt that is the case for the OP. They likely just read something wrong.
Reply
MB World Stories

The Best of Mercedes & AMG

story-0

6 Mercedes Models That Did NOT Age Well (But Are Somehow Still Cool)

 Verdad Gallardo
story-1

Manual Mercedes? 6 Times Sindelfingen Let Drivers Have All The Fun

 Verdad Gallardo
story-2

Mercedes SLR McLaren 722 S Is Extremely Rare Example Modified by McLaren

 Verdad Gallardo
story-3

8 Classic Boxy Mercedes Designs That Have Aged Like Fine Wine

 Verdad Gallardo
story-4

Flawlessly Restored Mercedes 190E Evo II Heads to Auction

 Verdad Gallardo
story-5

Electric Mercedes C-Class Unveiled: 11 Things You Need to Know

 Verdad Gallardo
story-6

Mercedes EQS Gets A Major Update: Everything You Need to Know

 Verdad Gallardo
story-7

5 Underrated Mercedes-Benz Models That Don't Get the Love They Deserve

 Verdad Gallardo
story-8

Mercedes 300D Has Pushed Well Past 1 Million Miles and It Ain't Stopping

 Verdad Gallardo
story-9

10 Most Reliable Mercedes-Benz Models You Can Buy Used

 Verdad Gallardo
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 12:25 PM
  #9  
OldManAndHisCar's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Jun 2021
Posts: 3,110
Likes: 1,346
From: Fleriduh
W212 E63S Wagon - GSL580 - E63 - E350 - C300
Originally Posted by JTK44
The pressure for non RF and RF are the same.
And, no matter what...remove the RF, while not a "true" AMG...it deserves a real tire
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 12:30 PM
  #10  
Rick_H's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Liked
 
Joined: Nov 2024
Posts: 43
Likes: 12
From: Virginia
2025 E53
Originally Posted by L1Wolf
To add to what has already been said, the tires do not have a "recommended" tire pressure on them. At least I've never seen one that does. What is on the physical tires is the max pressure. If the gas tank flap is saying a higher pressure than the max pressure of the actual tire something is wrong. Are you saying that the tires themselves have a max pressure of 40psi? Seems pretty low for a max psi of a tire.
I have the Michelin Pilot Sport 4S and the tire says 40psi...that's why I am confused. Why would the gas cap say up to 44psi when the tire says 40?
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 12:34 PM
  #11  
OldManAndHisCar's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Jun 2021
Posts: 3,110
Likes: 1,346
From: Fleriduh
W212 E63S Wagon - GSL580 - E63 - E350 - C300
Originally Posted by Rick_H
I have the Michelin Pilot Sport 4S and the tire says 40psi...that's why I am confused. Why would the gas cap say up to 44psi when the tire says 40?

The tire has no idea what car it is going on, what that car weighs and on and on and on...never, not ever go on what the tire says. Not even on a bicycle.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 12:39 PM
  #12  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by OldManAndHisCar
And, no matter what...remove the RF, while not a "true" AMG...it deserves a real tire
Contra point: the RF gives valuable safety that non RF do not have: The chance of a catastrophic failure with non RF vs. RF is so much higher, to gain marginal handling with non RF and give up the safety of the RF makes no sense.

If you hit a pot hole, a non RF with blow: a RF will have a tire bulge.

At night if you have a blowout, with a non RF you are stranded: either you carry a spare and give up the trunk or wait for a tow truck: with a RF you continue on your journey.

Just my $.02.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 12:44 PM
  #13  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by OldManAndHisCar
The tire has no idea what car it is going on, what that car weighs and on and on and on...never, not ever go on what the tire says. Not even on a bicycle.
Thanks.

Confirms posts #6 and #7 above.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 02:03 PM
  #14  
ua549's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 5,359
Likes: 1,097
.
Originally Posted by JTK44
Contra point: the RF gives valuable safety that non RF do not have: The chance of a catastrophic failure with non RF vs. RF is so much higher, to gain marginal handling with non RF and give up the safety of the RF makes no sense.

If you hit a pot hole, a non RF with blow: a RF will have a tire bulge.

At night if you have a blowout, with a non RF you are stranded: either you carry a spare and give up the trunk or wait for a tow truck: with a RF you continue on your journey.

Just my $.02.
Did you pull that catastrophic failure statistic from thin air or elsewhere? I've had two, non-repairable (catastrophic) failures with RF tires and never had a non-repairable failure with a non-RF tire.

If you have a blowout with a RF tire, you are stranded because they are not drivable. I had that experience and it reinforced my decision to switch the non-RF tires. The handling and ride is noticeably better with non-RF tires due to the elimination of about 20 pounds of unsprung weight and a more flexible tire.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 02:12 PM
  #15  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Originally Posted by ua549
Did you pull that catastrophic failure statistic from thin air or elsewhere? I've had two, non-repairable (catastrophic) failures with RF tires and never had a non-repairable failure with a non-RF tire.

If you have a blowout with a RF tire, you are stranded because they are not drivable. I had that experience and it reinforced my decision to switch the non-RF tires. The handling and ride is noticeably better with non-RF tires due to the elimination of about 20 pounds of unsprung weight and a more flexible tire.
No the weight difference is not 20 lbs. but less than 3 lbs per tire.

No actually personal experience:

I was changing a tire. On the inside there was a huge bubble. I had driven on it several hundred miles without knowing the bubble was there. If this was a non RF without the reinforced sidewalls I would have suffered a blowout.

Common sense dictates this result: RF have reinforced sidewalls vs. non reinforced sidewalls on a non run flat. That reinforced sidewall makes the tire safer.

Hope this clarifies.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 05:06 PM
  #16  
ua549's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 5,359
Likes: 1,097
.
Originally Posted by JTK44
No the weight difference is not 20 lbs. but less than 3 lbs per tire.

No actually personal experience:

I was changing a tire. On the inside there was a huge bubble. I had driven on it several hundred miles without knowing the bubble was there. If this was a non RF without the reinforced sidewalls I would have suffered a blowout.

Common sense dictates this result: RF have reinforced sidewalls vs. non reinforced sidewalls on a non run flat. That reinforced sidewall makes the tire safer.

Hope this clarifies.
You are jumping to a conclusion that reinforced sidewalls equates to some undefined aspect of safety. One could also posit that rough/hard handling vehicles are less safe than smooth handling vehicles.

The weight difference depends on brand and size. For my E300 size 245/45-18 the difference is 24 pounds per set of 4.
Continental ContiProContact SSR (RF) = 30 pounds
Continental ProContact TX (non-RF) = 24 pounds
Specs from Tire Rack
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 07:19 PM
  #17  
L1Wolf's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Veteran: Army
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,908
Likes: 665
From: Tennessee
W214 E450
Originally Posted by Rick_H
I have the Michelin Pilot Sport 4S and the tire says 40psi...that's why I am confused. Why would the gas cap say up to 44psi when the tire says 40?
Can you provide a picture of the tire saying 40psi?
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 07:21 PM
  #18  
L1Wolf's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
Veteran: Army
10 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Favorite
 
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,908
Likes: 665
From: Tennessee
W214 E450
I know its hard, but can we try and stay on topic. The OP is asking about tire pressure. We don't need a back and forth on RF vs non-RF tires.
Reply
Old Jun 2, 2025 | 07:57 PM
  #19  
JTK44's Avatar
MBWorld Fanatic!
5 Year Member
Community Builder
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 3,048
Likes: 905
From: Long Island, NY
2019 E 450, 2016 E350 4matic (retired), 2018 Ford Edge Sport, 2008 Porsche Boxster
Just went to Tirerack.com to look up the maximum pressure for the Michelin Pilot 4S, 21 inches which I assume the OP has on his car.

The max pressure, according to Tirerack.com is 51 psi.

Mystery solved, I hope!

See: https://www.tirerack.com/tires/tires...20295%2F30-21R
Reply

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 


You have already rated this thread Rating: Thread Rating: 0 votes,  average.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:48 AM.

story-0
6 Mercedes Models That Did NOT Age Well (But Are Somehow Still Cool)

Slideshow: Not every Mercedes design becomes timeless, some feel stuck in the era they came from.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-12 18:09:07


VIEW MORE
story-1
Manual Mercedes? 6 Times Sindelfingen Let Drivers Have All The Fun

Slideshow: Yes, Mercedes built manual cars, and some of them are far more interesting than you'd expect.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-02 12:36:58


VIEW MORE
story-2
Mercedes SLR McLaren 722 S Is Extremely Rare Example Modified by McLaren

Slideshow: A one-of-one U.S.-spec Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren Roadster became even rarer after a factory-backed transformation at McLaren's headquarters.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-29 11:19:28


VIEW MORE
story-3
8 Classic Boxy Mercedes Designs That Have Aged Like Fine Wine

Slideshow: Before curves took over, Mercedes mastered the art of the straight line, and some of those shapes still look right today.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-25 12:05:49


VIEW MORE
story-4
Flawlessly Restored Mercedes 190E Evo II Heads to Auction

Slideshow: The 190E Evolution II shows how a homologation necessity became a six-figure collector icon.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-22 17:53:47


VIEW MORE
story-5
Electric Mercedes C-Class Unveiled: 11 Things You Need to Know

Slideshow: Mercedes is turning one of its core nameplates electric, and the details show just how serious this shift is.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-21 13:58:06


VIEW MORE
story-6
Mercedes EQS Gets A Major Update: Everything You Need to Know

Slideshow: Faster charging, longer range, and a controversial steer-by-wire system define the latest evolution of Mercedes-Benz EQS.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-15 10:35:34


VIEW MORE
story-7
5 Underrated Mercedes-Benz Models That Don't Get the Love They Deserve

Slideshow: These overlooked Mercedes-Benz models never got the spotlight, but they quietly delivered more than most remember.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-13 19:35:45


VIEW MORE
story-8
Mercedes 300D Has Pushed Well Past 1 Million Miles and It Ain't Stopping

Slideshow: A well-used 1991 Mercedes-Benz 300D with more than one million miles is now looking for a new owner, and it still appears ready for more.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-10 10:05:15


VIEW MORE
story-9
10 Most Reliable Mercedes-Benz Models You Can Buy Used

Slideshow: From bulletproof sedans to surprisingly tough SUVs, these Mercedes models proved that the three-pointed star can go the distance.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-04-08 09:55:49


VIEW MORE