โMay-05-2014 04:58 PM
โMay-10-2014 11:16 AM
โMay-08-2014 07:16 AM
sasha_j wrote:
I will say to you skeptics, that YES, I should of got a good shot of the bad tire.
That said, you can also say my perspective on the RV industry is biased based on my experience owning 2 trailers, both of which required wheel and tire upgrades just to run the OEM GVWR ratings. Look at my current sig......
IMO, there has been a long term trend by manufacturers to undersize the running gear of trailers, presumably, to keep their costs down. This may has changed over the last couple years, but ask anyone buying a TH or 5'er circa 2000-2010. You can find 18K rigs with 15" wheels from that era.
Sometimes I think the design specs are put out by bean counters, not engineers. Thus, I am hyper-sensitive to this issue, yes.
โMay-08-2014 06:36 AM
โMay-07-2014 07:02 PM
โMay-07-2014 07:00 PM
bpounds wrote:
I usually just stay away from tire threads here, and I probably should have on this one too. No offense meant to anyone.
Fact is that I just cannot relate to all the ST hate around here. I've never had any problem with them. And my wild guess would be that 90% of RV trailers are sold with ST tires, and if they were blowing right and left like some would have you believe, I would see a lot of trailers changing tires on the highway. But I don't. Rarely see the obvious mismatched spare wheel mounted either.
But I also believe the respected forum members who have personally experienced failures. Seems like they tend to be the larger rigs that might have been running very near rated sidewall capacity. And those bigger units have to make large turns and necessarily jump curb aprons more often. Or maybe, like anything else in life, you don't want to ride the ragged edge of capacity. Shame on manufacturers for doing that.
Empirical evidence shows that ST tires are not as bad as the RV.net legend.
โMay-07-2014 05:34 PM
bpounds wrote:
I usually just stay away from tire threads here, and I probably should have on this one too. No offense meant to anyone.
Fact is that I just cannot relate to all the ST hate around here. I've never had any problem with them. And my wild guess would be that 90% of RV trailers are sold with ST tires, and if they were blowing right and left like some would have you believe, I would see a lot of trailers changing tires on the highway. But I don't. Rarely see the obvious mismatched spare wheel mounted either.
But I also believe the respected forum members who have personally experienced failures. Seems like they tend to be the larger rigs that might have been running very near rated sidewall capacity. And those bigger units have to make large turns and necessarily jump curb aprons more often. Or maybe, like anything else in life, you don't want to ride the ragged edge of capacity. Shame on manufacturers for doing that.
Empirical evidence shows that ST tires are not as bad as the RV.net legend.
โMay-07-2014 02:12 PM
โMay-07-2014 05:41 AM
โMay-07-2014 04:21 AM
CKNSLS wrote:sasha_j wrote:
Yes folks, here we witnessed a brand new 5th wheel trailer that couldn't get from the factory to the dealer without a tire blowout....so sad. No it's not ours, I just witnessed this while on the road ourselves......
I had to do a detailed write up. Here it is with pics if you're interested.
clicky here
Please take the time to read it all and view all the pictures before commenting. The only real thing I did not "get" was how these 15" tires achieved their "E" rating. I thought you needed a 16" tire to get to "E" ratings.
Enjoy.
Your "write up" is pontification at it's finest.
โMay-07-2014 04:03 AM
โMay-06-2014 11:51 PM
sasha_j wrote:
Yes folks, here we witnessed a brand new 5th wheel trailer that couldn't get from the factory to the dealer without a tire blowout....so sad. No it's not ours, I just witnessed this while on the road ourselves......
I had to do a detailed write up. Here it is with pics if you're interested.
clicky here
Please take the time to read it all and view all the pictures before commenting. The only real thing I did not "get" was how these 15" tires achieved their "E" rating. I thought you needed a 16" tire to get to "E" ratings.
Enjoy.
โMay-06-2014 11:34 PM
โMay-06-2014 09:16 PM
โMay-06-2014 12:07 PM