Tire pressure is always a tradeoff.
It helps to have a baseline. If you can figure your axle curb weights it helps. But knowing that truck is probably about 4500lbs full of gas and empty bed, you’ve got around 3k bit less maybe on the front axle and around 1500, bit more, on the rear.
If you look up a load/pressure chart for your tire sizes, you’ll see what the minimum safe pressure is for the weight.
For the fronts, you’ll see 32-35psi is about the min. Rear will be good for about 3klbs with 25psi.
Now to find the balance. I prefer to run on the lower end for ride quality and using some tire flex to soften hard bumps.
I’m running the same size combo on my C10 and believe I’m about 35F and 25R. 35psi in them big 275s is too much imo for empty daily driving. They’re basically rock hard at that pressure with no significant load in the bed. They do not feel soft.
Your fronts might. Try raising front to 40psi and lowering the rear to about 25 and see if you like it. That’s not excessive.
Like a few days ago, my son took his truck for an oil change. He’s not able to do his own where he lives (or he would…dammit…lol).
Has a Ram 1500 that curiously came equipped with E load tires and door stickers that call for 65psi or some ridiculous pressure. Like a heavy half rating or something.
He’s running 285s in place of the OE 245s and they’re LR E tires so heavier stiffer sidewalls than needed and bigger obviously.
Oil jockey wants to put his tires to 65 psi at all corners…on a half ton with bigger tires, that hauls nothing but ass, going into winter in Montana….
He had to explain to the feller that was way too much air and please go 35F, 30R….. guy was a little perplexed.