Tire pressures
We have a Itasca Ellipse and the winnebago sticker told us 120psi all around. we had coach weighed at Freightliner and then told 120psi in steer and 90 psi in rears. the change made a huge difference in smother ride. Its the weight of your rig that determines tire pressure
The factory service at Freightliner in Gaffney, SC is one of the absolute best places to determine your actual proper tire pressure, by doing exactly this, weighing on all 4 corners. You do that by weighing a coach that is "fully loaded" with what you would fill it with, if you were leaving on a long trip, loaded to the max. It is the best way to get side to side weights, and front to rear weights, and to be sure you do not exceed the axle weight limits. Obviously you do not want it heavy on one side, and not heavily loaded in the rear. It can make the coach hard to handle, sometimes dangerously, in addition to riding roughly. There can and will be some variation in side to side, but the closer to balanced it is, the better it handles in curves.
Fully loaded, they determined that my coach's cold tire pressures(before the sun hits them and before we drive on them regardless of the temperature outside*) should be 108psi rears, and 100psi front. These load range G Michelin tires are rated to hold 110psi max cold. Michelin makes a chart available on line that shows the cold tire pressure for the weight that tire is carrying. You set all tires on an axle to the pressure recommended for the heaviest side. Do not set one side higher or lower than the other.
We have gone 30k miles keeping pressures where they recommended, and going over CAT scales occasionally to verify my weights, and tires are doing well. Performed flawlessly from VA all through Canada, Alaska, and back.
*According to Mike @ Freightliner, check and set your pressures before you drive on them. Doesn't matter if the temperature drops during the day while driving, just remember to check them again the next morning before leaving, and adjust as necessary. He advised us that tire pressures can vary 12% or more from cold to operating temperature. But we don't set our pressures at operating temperature, only when cold.
I wish you safe travels and enjoyable times!