enblethen wrote:
I would suggest keeping an eye on the tires. If you see any white material around the ground level, protect the tire in some way. Even the spray tire coatings will be enough.
:R
I currently have 1/8" of clear slippery stuff and 3" of "white" stuff (ice and snow) all around my trailer tires.. Not gonna hurt them..
I even have the passenger side of my trailer facing south (gets a LOT of summer and winter sun exposure) and have never had tire damage on said side..
My trailer even gets lots of PA road salt spray on the drivers side since my trailer parking is just off of a very busy traveled road and no tire damage on that side..
No need to slather on WATER BASED "fixes" that simply wash off with the next rain, you are just flushing your money down the drain..
Perhaps you can come up with another RV.net "tall tail"?
Next I suppose you will tell us that parking a RV on pavement will cause a cataclysmic micro climate change that causes catastrophic damage to tires :S