Forum Discussion
spud1957
Mar 22, 2015Explorer
BFL13 wrote:PrivatePilot wrote:
Gary, read the entire thread. If Canadian Tire ..........
The only legal requirement is that the tires are capable of carrying the weight for the application they are being used for, AKA they must be rated to carry the weight the axle they're to be attached to is rated for. In my case the tires are each rated for just under 2700 pounds each and are mounted on an axle rated to carry less than that, therefore they are well within their legal required ratings.
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When did it become law that the tires have to be rated "to carry the weight of the axle" using the axle's weight "rating" as stated above?
It is true that the tires have to carry the load put on them, but that has nothing to do with the axle rating. In fact the GAWR can be based on the tires max load limit while the axle is rated to carry much more.
When you go on the scales and get your "axle weight" that is to get the load on the tires. Nothing to do with "axle weight rating"
Our truck has a rear axle rated at over 10,000 lbs. But the RGAWR is 6,084 lbs, which is what the two E tires can take at 80psi as singles.
Meanwhile our trailer has a pair of 5,200 lb axles but its GAWR is 8,600 lbs, which is max for four C tires at 50 lbs.
If I put stronger tires on the vehicle it would not change its legal GAWR. There are other components involved such as the springs. GVWR also involves the frame strength and I think, the stopping the brakes can do. If you modify your truck AFAIK you can go through a process to get its weight ratings legally changed, but otherwise its legal ratings stay the same.
BFL13, not sure if this is what you are disputing but this is taken from Transport Canada's CMVS110 definitions:
GAWR: Gross Axle Weight Rating, in kilograms, means the value specified by the vehicle manufacturer as the
load-carrying capacity of a single axle system, as measured at the tire-ground interfaces. “The GAWR shall not
exceed the rated load carrying capacity of, but not limited to, the tires, rims, suspension, axle mounting hardware
and axles.”
So it looks like it says, the axle rating cannot be greater than the tire's rating (among other components). Not sure if you meant to say your rear axle is rated for 10,000lbs or did you mean to say GVWR? You have a 3/4 ton so your rear axle is rated at 6084. From a Transport Canada perspective, your rear axle is rated at 6084 by GM, per your door label. So your tires' load capacity has to be equal or greater than 6084.
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