โMar-11-2016 03:01 PM
โMar-14-2016 09:27 AM
โMar-14-2016 09:21 AM
โMar-14-2016 09:06 AM
โMar-14-2016 07:45 AM
โMar-14-2016 06:27 AM
Me Again wrote:
Come down to Arizona and spend some time with snowbirds that travel thousands of miles in a few days to get here and back home on these cheap ST tires and you will find a very high percent of failures. In the fall they are easy to identify, has the side of their trailer is still torn up.
โMar-14-2016 05:48 AM
โMar-14-2016 05:25 AM
gitane59 wrote:
Also it is factual that the government mandated tire testing regiment for ST tires for certification is much less severe than for LT tires.
years.
โMar-14-2016 04:30 AM
gitane59 wrote:
Please tell me all knowing why individuals who have had multiple sudden tire failures with off brand OEM ST Chinese tires suddenly stop having failures after changing to quality name brand tires.
These individuals report making no changes to their tire maintenance process or their driving behaviors after switching to brand name quality rubber yet the repeated failures cease.
I will continue to educate people based on facts I have discovered and experience I have gained towing various vehicles for over 40 years.
โMar-14-2016 03:42 AM
RinconVTR wrote:
I drive/pull various trailers with mileage totaling well over what the majority here total and have never owned an american made trailer tire NOR LT trailer tire. I am over 40 years old, a 3rd gen RV'er, and NEVER had a tire failure while I was at the wheel. This includes those little 8" donuts tires, which I've pulled thru dozens of state at 80mph when they were rated at 45mph!!!
Go find an oil brand or octane thread to loose sleep over. This is not the debate you are looking for.
โMar-13-2016 06:08 PM
โMar-13-2016 05:09 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
Our new camper has China bombs too so I'm going to run them for 1 year max and switch out to something else.
To date I've had excellent results from Goodyear Marathons but they're made in China also. :M
โMar-13-2016 03:01 PM
Me Again wrote:
wilber1, you should regularly buy lotto tickets! Chris
โMar-13-2016 01:53 PM
CKNSLS wrote:Fabguy wrote:
I must be in the minority here because I have been using Chinese made ST tires for over 15 years now, and have never had one failure.
Carlisle RH tires that have been out about 5 years have had very few failures reported. The most failures recently reported have been Maxxis, but yet they continue to be recommended on here without impunity.
Go figure. It's the same rhetoric on this forum. Nobody speeds with ST tires-yet I get passed all the time with rigs going faster than what the ST tires are rated for.
I'll stop here because my last post was apparently deleted.
โMar-13-2016 11:33 AM
TucsonJim wrote:CKNSLS wrote:
The "China bomb"comments really are not useful and are getting really old....more reasons people are feeling in droves from this forum.
Let them flee. Evidently you haven't been the victim of these cheaply made pieces of junk.
Here's a couple of examples I've had:
Last month while driving on I-10, I lost the tread off of a Westlake (Chinese) ST tire doing significant damage to the undercarriage of my FW. The tire was still fully inflated at 80psi after the tread came off. The tire was also running at less than 90F based on the TPMS that was monitoring it. My FW was not overloaded, and I never exceed 65mph, even though the tire was rated for 75mph. There was no evidence of a belt separation or road hazard. I'll bet this kind of failure is rare on a Sailun, Maxxis, or Goodyear G614.
A couple of years ago, a CHINA BOMB that was mounted in the spare position of my trailer actually blew up with enough force to damage the siding on the trailer. It had never been on the road, was less than one year old and was covered with a spare tire cover. In other words, it was NEW with zero miles on it and inflated to the sidewall pressure of 80psi.
I've had a full set of Chinese tires with slipped steel belts upon delivery of a brand new FW. So they only had the mileage that they incurred during delivery with an empty coach.
So based on my experience, these tires are dangerous and have earned the title CHINA BOMB. I'll keep saying it, and if you don't like it, that's too bad.
CHINA BOMB, CHINA BOMB, CHINA BOMB, CHINA BOMB.
โMar-13-2016 10:35 AM
boshog wrote:
Well folks, I've got to tell you that reading the several tire issue threads on this forum has me very concerned. I've seen pictures of tire failures from many brands including the Marathons and frankly, I have no idea were the line between a "china bomb" and a dependable tire lays.
So I bought a new Montana 3790RD last season and the wife and I plan on going full time traveling the country next year. This is the tire that came with the Montana;
Trailer King ST Radials
ST235/80 R16 124/120L
Load Range E
Max load single 3520 pounds, dual 3080.
Maximum pressure 80PSI
Are these tires "china bombs"?