Hi, John T,
The short answer is: around 35psi in the 50-559 rear, and 50psi in the 42-559 front.
The full story is I bought a used Sofrider two years ago, and replaced the 65psi Kendas with 100psi Kendas; then started getting used to riding the bike on progressively more challenging hills. I almost always ran the tires at 100psi or close to it. I always felt uneasy going downhill at speed, as if the I had no real sense of road contact, especially on anything less than a perfect road surface. I could all the vibrations from the imperfections. (I always do continue pedaling, as you recommend, and I agree, it is necessary to feeling better in control of the bike).
Then I bought another used Sofrider for my wife, and noticed that hers felt much different from mine: solid steering feel even on downhills. I kept trying to figure out the difference. The only discernible difference between the bikes was the 65 vs 100 psi tires---so I started lowering the pressure in my 100psi Kendas, and notice some improvement. Eventually, I was running the 100psi Kendas at 65psi! It made a big improvement in the feel, with no discernible loss of speed. Even then, my bike didn't feel quite as confidence inspiring as my wife's!
Then I read the Bicycle Quarterly article on "tire drop" as an indicator of proper air pressure, based on overall load on each tire. (You've read and commented on my post regarding that article elsewhere in this forum). BQ also has done research showing that for the average rider, wider tires (at the proper tire drop pressure for the rider/bike combination) have rolling resistance and speed comparable to many if not most skinnier tires, and they often improve the handling and comfort on many bikes as well. Some bikes rider better with wider tires. (In other words, their conclusion is tires wider than 1 inch would serve most riders better, offering a more enjoyable ride without compromising speed. But few people looking at a skinny tire next to a wider tire would believe that.)
Of course some riders need the higher pressure in their tires, and always "top off" the tires before a ride---but I think this might be because they need it---a lot of riders weigh more than I do, and the tire loads are greater. I'm pretty low weight (70kg/155lbs), and by the charts, I should be riding at 60psi or below for 1.25 or 1.50 tires to achieve the most efficient tire drop. My experience with the two Sofriders seems to support this. I get a much better ride from the lower pressures.
When I upgraded the wheels on my Sofrider, I opted for Marathon Supreme tires, for their reputation for good road grip, and their lower weight and low rolling resistance. I thought I'd try 50-559 on the rear and 42-559 on the front to increase slightly the head angle, hoping to get slightly zippier steering (I had test ridden one of your super cool Silvio's by this time...).
Based on my weight plus the bike's weight, and an estimate of 55% front-45% rear distribution, I run the rear 50-599 at around 35psi, and the front 42-559 at around 50psi. The difference in handling and road feel is dramatic: the constant "chatter" is gone, even at 30+mph down hill on rough road finishes. The "contact with the road" feel I was looking for is always there.
As an amateur not running a time trial I notice no loss in speed. In fact, by the computer, I am faster. Some of that is the lighter wheels (and the lighter, higher quality tires), but I mention it just to indicate that wider tires don't mean slower here. (I ride in a 16-18mph group these days).
I continue to look for other ways to lower the weight, and to make slight improvements in the handling---thus, my interest in following up on John Z.'s switch to a different rear shock. But make no mistake, I love the way my Sofrider rides as it is now. I've completed a century with it (actually, before the switch to new wheels and tires), and I noticed how at 80 miles everyone else was aching and complaining, but I still felt great!
David Hardt
You know, I test rode the Silvio, and I'm sure the LBS fellow topped off the tires. I wonder what it would have felt like to me if I had ridden it at the pressure more suited to my low weight?