Onewheel Pint tire pressure
Future Motion's spec is 15-20 PSI. Most riders settle around 17. The Pint is the lightest current model — its small mass makes it more sensitive to pressure changes than the heavier XR or GT, so getting PSI right matters more here than on bigger boards.
Quick answer
- Factory range: 15-20 PSI.
- Most-common sweet spot: 17 PSI for average rider weight (70-90 kg).
- Comfort-leaning: 14-15 PSI.
- Speed/range-leaning: 19-20 PSI.
Why the Pint is more sensitive to PSI
The Pint weighs about 11 kg. The XR weighs around 12 kg. The GT is closer to 16 kg. At any given rider weight, the Pint's lighter platform contributes less to total tire compression, so a 1 PSI change has a bigger relative impact on the Pint than on the GT.
Practical consequence: small adjustments matter. Going from 16 to 18 PSI on a Pint feels significantly different. The same change on a GT is noticeable but smaller.
By rider weight
| Rider weight | Comfort | All-round | Speed/range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 60 kg | 13 PSI | 15 PSI | 17 PSI |
| 60-75 kg | 15 PSI | 17 PSI | 19 PSI |
| 75-90 kg | 16 PSI | 17-18 PSI | 20 PSI |
| Over 90 kg | 17 PSI | 19 PSI | 20 PSI |
What changes if you go too low
Below 12 PSI on a Pint:
- Tire starts to fold under hard turns — unpredictable cornering.
- Increased risk of pinch flats from kerbs and pot holes.
- Tire wear shifts to the shoulders, halving the tire's useful life.
- Battery range drops 15-20%.
- Top speed feels sketchy — board can wobble at higher speeds.
What changes if you go too high
Above 22 PSI:
- Harsh over any imperfection in the road.
- Reduced grip on wet surfaces.
- Tire wear shifts to the centre, halving useful life.
- Out of factory spec, voids warranty if anything goes wrong.
Maintenance routine
Once a week:
- Check PSI cold (before riding).
- Adjust to your target.
- Visually inspect the tire for cuts, embedded debris, or unusual wear patterns.
The whole job takes 90 seconds. Skip it for a month and the ride changes noticeably without you realising why.