โMay-31-2015 12:35 PM
โJun-02-2015 03:50 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
I do know that with the mirrors on my truck, towing mirrors, I cannot see the rear tire without adjusting it so I can't see much of anything else. Personally I'd rather see the traffic beside and behind me rather than a tire.
โJun-01-2015 01:17 PM
Irelands child wrote:
Wow - I'm missing something or the extendable OEM mirrors on my past '06 F350 CCSB or current '11 F250 CCLB wont go out far enough to see the rear tires on our 5er. Yeah, I can kinda see part of front ones but for sure, I'm a lot more interested in the traffic around me and what the wingnut in the econobox with a phart can muffler is doing or that person tending to their makeup or cell phone while entering the interstate on the ramp and not accelerating.
As far as an ST tire having stiffer sidewall - don't ever believe that myth. A 37 pound Tow Max, and a tire that so many manufacturers are using as original equipment cannot compare in strength to a 45-50+ pound LT, be it a highway rib or a 'standard' LT, or a G614 (which IS a 57# LT tire). As a matter of fact, just this morning I compared sidewall flexibility between an ST and a new LT, same size - there wasn't any comparison.
Now, are all the ST tires bad? No, but there are enough cases that sure make me wary with the weight and size of many of today's towable RVs that I've put LTs on our ~13K, 38' 5er
โJun-01-2015 12:13 PM
Trackrig wrote:
Before we bought our DP we were looking at fifth wheel trailers. When looking at three axle trailers specifically, I was curious if three axle trailers suffered more tire damage or wear & tear because the front and rear axles slide sideways more when making tight turns in and out of parking lots or when getting into some parking places?
What's been your experience?
Bill
โJun-01-2015 10:46 AM
laknox wrote:
My brother used my FW this past weekend. On the way up to Big Lake in the White Mountains of eastern AZ, he was passing through Show Low and noticed that his 2005 F350 seemed to be handling funny.
Hadn't noticed anything while driving at highway speed, only when he slowed to the 30-35 mph city speed. He pulled off and checked the 6 tires on his truck (FW was fine), all had air and no difference in sound from a quick "hammer check".
He went another 1/4 mile down the road and it got worse. Decided to pull off onto a side street and nearly didn't make the corner; truck simply wouldn't turn. He finally got if off the main drag and stopped.
As he got out, he could hear air hissing. As he walked forward, the LF tire simply gave a loud POP and sat down on the rim. Changed to the spare and drove about 1/2 mile to a Discount for them to check.
Broken belt and he's lucky it didn't happen about 15 minutes sooner, when he was still traveling at 60+. Tires are 245/75R/17 Michelin AT, about 3.5 years old, maybe 20k miles, total.
Of course, DT didn't have one in stock, so he had to roll the bones and drive another 50 miles sans spare, but he made it. Went back the next day to pick up the new tire. He'll be watching the other 5 like a hawk, for sure.
Lyle
โJun-01-2015 10:33 AM
โJun-01-2015 10:21 AM
C-Bears wrote:
I can tell you from pulling other things besides RV's down the road that you are not going to catch that rapid deflating tire by watching your mirrors, or by staring at the point where the tire meets the pavement.
Anyone pulling a heavy RV should invest in a TPMS. You can monitor all you tire pressures and temperatures constantly plus an alarm will immediately sound if there is a problem, prior to it causing damage.
โJun-01-2015 09:33 AM
โJun-01-2015 07:44 AM
โJun-01-2015 06:15 AM
โMay-31-2015 11:25 PM
โMay-31-2015 08:33 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
Exactly how do you see the last tire on a 5th wheel? I can't see the last tire on my triple axle toyhauler. How do you? What kind of mirrors are you using?
โMay-31-2015 06:20 PM
โMay-31-2015 06:06 PM
โMay-31-2015 05:45 PM