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19 Replies
- PeralkoExplorerWolfe10 had the right answer. Also go on the Michelin website--they have a very good write-up on tire care and inspection. Radial cracks, if present, has a maximum depth that you can check yourself as explained on the website. If your tires fail your inspection as outlined in the tire guide, you don't need any further inspection, just new tires.
- prstlkExplorerRead something a while back about x-raying tires to determine viability. Mostly driven buy the short run tire users like concrete, dump trucks, large equipment operators etc. Who have the same problem we do. Age out, as opposed to wear out. Anybody out there heard of this? Anybody know of any updates.
- tropical36Explorer II
ricelake922 wrote:
Hello. I have a 1996 Monaco Dynasty and the DOT on the front Michelin tires reads DOT M53T C83X 2810. For safety reasons only.....do I change the tires? Thank you in advance for your responses.
I wouldn't if they were still good and you could always have them inspected by a unbiased professional. Even at that, one could replace the two steer tires and the rest later on, for a little more life and for lessening the severity of the monetary bite.
Many tire manufactures, including Michelin claim a 10yr max life with proper care. - ricelake922ExplorerThank you to everyone. I am taking the RV to a tire place that has qualified technicians call Kal Can.
- parkmanaaExplorerIMOP, get them checked by a qualified TRUCK TIRE dealer service person.
Michein's official recommendation: After 5 years have the tires checked annually by a qualified tire technician, and after 10 years replace regardless of how good they appear".
Take the advice of the manufacturer and a good truck tire service person, not all the opinionated responses you find on this forum.
"40 years in the tire industry; seen it all, and done most of it" - TerryallanExplorer IIIMOP get new ones. Tires oil them selves while rolling. they don't while sitting, and so they rot, Doesn't matter what they are sitting on, they rot from lack of oiling. Pretty much that easy. You may not be able to see it. but it is there.
In the end. Your life your choice. - EffyExplorer IIIn many case you cannot visibly see dry rot from the sidewalls. Often they get rot and cracks between the tread first. I agree with most posters that no one on this forum can tell you what to do based on a post. Have them inspected by a reputable tire shop. One that does not just want to sell you tires. An RV service shop that does inspections should be able to do it as well.
- IvylogExplorer IIIIf they are XRV then change all six. If a Michelin truck tire then I'd buy two new for the front and probably not Michelin... Hankook, Toyo, Bridgestone........ Are you sure the rear four tires are 2010?
- JarlaxleExplorer IIWhat do they look like? If they're badly checked, replace them. If not, run them.
- MarkTwainExplorer
352 wrote:
If you want the quick and direct answer ask the manufacturer or your trusted local tire shop. How you took care of the tires may or may not get you more time after 5 years. I blew out two 4 1/2 year old tires lately that were garage kept, lifted up off axels when not in use, looked brand new and properly inflated. Is it really worth serious injury or death?
X2, Save $$$ anywhere else but not your tires!! Safety is too important!!!
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