What is the tire pressure for the Edge?
2 Answers
Ford Edge's normal tire pressure range is 2.4-2.5bar. Due to seasonal factors, winter tire pressure can be appropriately increased by 0.2bar, while summer pressure can be 0.1bar lower. To check tire pressure on the Ford Edge, first enter the vehicle's computer main menu, select Driver Assist, then click to enter Tire Pressure Monitoring to view. The Edge is equipped with a tire pressure monitoring system, and when it detects one or more tires significantly underinflated, a warning light will illuminate. If the low tire pressure warning light comes on, you should stop to check the tires as soon as possible and inflate them to the correct pressure. If the tire pressure monitoring indicator light comes on (a yellow symbol, an irregular circle with no seal on top and four small spikes at the bottom, with an exclamation mark inside), there are generally three possible reasons: Abnormal tire pressure. It usually alarms when the pressure is below 1.8bar or above 3.0bar. At this time, tire inspection and pressure adjustment are required. Tire pressure monitoring not reset. After inflating the tires, the tire pressure was not reset in time, causing the tire pressure monitoring system to still record the original data, and the tire pressure monitoring indicator light will illuminate. At this time, simply perform a tire pressure reset. Damaged tire pressure sensor. The tire pressure sensor is used to monitor tire pressure and is directly installed inside the tire, connected to the tire inflation port. If the tire pressure sensor is damaged while driving, it will also cause the tire pressure fault light to come on. For sensor damage issues, only a brand new replacement can be installed.
As a long-time Ford Edge owner, I remember the manufacturer recommends tire pressure between 32-35 PSI depending on model year. For my 2018 model, the door jamb sticker clearly states 33 PSI for front tires and 35 PSI for rear. After several long trips, I found maintaining 33 PSI gives optimal fuel efficiency and ride comfort. I check monthly with a basic pressure gauge - releasing air if overinflated or adding if low. Winter demands more frequent checks as pressure drops easily, otherwise accelerated tire wear and increased fuel consumption occur. Always have technicians double-check during routine maintenance - never overlook these details.