Forum Discussion
- jody_hExplorerThanks john i did up the tires to load d range. It wasn't that much more. Had them put on today.
http://www.realdealtires.com/tires/view/125939/maxxis-m8008-st-radial-trailer-st205-75r15/ - JBarcaNomad II
jody h wrote:
Has anyone used theses tires? Had a blow out today and have another tire ready to go. So its time for new tires.
http://www.realdealtires.com/tires/view/85851
Hi Jody,
As far as the brand Maxxis and the M8008, they are a good tire however the 2 sets I had did develop cracks in the tread area at 5 years. I did not have a failure though. 5 years is about it for most any ST trailer tire anyways.
That said, I see the size you are listing and then I saw you have a 5th wheel. My 205/75/R15 C's where on my older TT camper and a lot smaller camper then yours.
I tried to find out some about your camper and I found a for sale on on the web with a weight sticker.
See here http://www.berrylandcampers.com/5th-wheels/flagstaff/flagstaff-8524rk-5th-wheel-c801084.html
That shows a 8,470 GVWR. If your camper has the same GVWR, hear is a heads up.
You may be into a tire loading issue. The 205/75R15 C load range will not hold the entire GVWR of your camper. The mfg gave you tires (axles and springs too) that count on truck holding for close to 1,500# of the camper weight and that is with 0 reserve capacity on the tires if you load the camper to full GVWR.
If you have not been to a truck scale, I recommend you get individual wheel weights fully loaded ready to go camping. You may find you have 1 or more tires over the rated tire loads. It is now becoming more common to recommend for tandem axle trailers to need 20% reserve capacity in the tires above the heaviest loaded wheel.
It would be best to weigh your rig and know your weights before buying new tires. If you find you are overloading 1 or more wheels or you do not have very much at all reserve capacity, you now know about it. Then you have to figure out, do I upgrade the load range and possibly the wheel as well or do I start removing a bunch of stuff to allow the stock size to work? If you have a loading problem, the Maxxis while good, will not fix that.
Hope this helps and good luck
John - flat_twinExplorerI'm on my third year with Maxxis 8008 205's on a 7x16 Haulmark trailer and I just bought a set of 225 E rated 8008's for our new to us toy hauler. No problems.
- TachdriverExplorerThose previous pictures are pretty obvious, I just need to make sure my pre-trip inspection is throughly done.
- mosseaterExplorer III don't have too many miles on mine so far, but am completely satisfied so far. Mine are the same size in D and I run them at 65 psi.
- Denman was made in MX. Belt separation on at least two. One of which threw the tread off. Still held air. Put on the spare and rolled home.
Tread was flat across when new. This condition can be hard to see unless the tire is removed for inspection. Any uneven wear should be suspect for additional inspection. - TachdriverExplorer
smkettner wrote:
I put Ds on mine and run at 60/65 psi. Denman's lasted three years and I hope to get five+ out of the MAXXIS.
If you really want a tough tire get an LT215/75R15 such as GY Wrangler Silent Armor.
http://www.goodyearrvtires.com/tire-selector.aspx#dialog
What happened to them after three years? Curious as I am running chinese tires and am there in age as well.... - I put Ds on mine and run at 60/65 psi. Denman's lasted three years and I hope to get five+ out of the MAXXIS.
If you really want a tough tire get an LT215/75R15 such as GY Wrangler Silent Armor.
http://www.goodyearrvtires.com/tire-selector.aspx#dialog - fla-gypsyExplorer
ScottG wrote:
The Maxxis are well worth the small difference in price and it's the only 15" ST tire that many of us will even use.
That would include me - ScottGNomadThe Maxxis are well worth the small difference in price and it's the only 15" ST tire that many of us will even use.
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