โMar-10-2015 09:14 AM
โMar-11-2015 01:26 PM
MM49 wrote:
Trailer tire design recommends less traction and less grip for better performance in trailer application. A trailer tire should be better at sliding that steering. This is the main argument with putting LT tires on a trailer application. The people of this group require that you drink the koolade and forget about suspension performance. Or just wait five minutes and they will contradict themselves.
MM49
โMar-11-2015 01:05 PM
MM49 wrote:
Trailer tire design recommends less traction and less grip for better performance in trailer application. A trailer tire should be better at sliding that steering. This is the main argument with putting LT tires on a trailer application. The people of this group require that you drink the koolade and forget about suspension performance. Or just wait five minutes and they will contradict themselves.
MM49
โMar-11-2015 12:39 PM
โMar-11-2015 11:53 AM
Dennis M M wrote:
1. weigh your rig - axle weights are fine, but individual wheel weights are better.
โMar-11-2015 11:18 AM
โMar-11-2015 10:35 AM
Shoe2728 wrote:
Got E rated tires installed, 80psi max, Tire guy said it would be better to run around 65-70 psi as tires heat up. Always thought I should run max cold rating 80psi. FW weight is around 9000 lbs hooked up to truck.
โMar-11-2015 10:21 AM
โMar-11-2015 09:48 AM
Me Again wrote:Shoe2728 wrote:
I had St 235 80R 16E went to BF Goodrich Commercial T/A All-Season 235 85R 16E GVW of FW is 12000. I have looked for a pressure weight table but mostly all I fine is max inflation rate is 80 psi. I have a 2011 crossroads cruiser 305skp
To get this back on track.
With a 12K 5th wheel you have around 9,600 lbs on the axles. Michelin CS(BFG is one of theirs) will tell you if you know your weights to use the inflation chart, if not run max sidewall pressure. I have a slightly heavier trailer that is placard for that size and list 65 lbs inflation. I run 71 pounds after finding a slight more wear on the outer edges years ago. My friends similar size trailer was placard at 80 PSI. So not everyone agrees.
Michelin will also tell you that over inflation reduces braking and increases the chance of impact damage. Weight the axles, check the inflation chart and add 5 PSI would be my answer.
Chris
โMar-11-2015 08:29 AM
Me Again wrote:Shoe2728 wrote:
I had St 235 80R 16E went to BF Goodrich Commercial T/A All-Season 235 85R 16E GVW of FW is 12000. I have looked for a pressure weight table but mostly all I fine is max inflation rate is 80 psi. I have a 2011 crossroads cruiser 305skp
To get this back on track.
With a 12K 5th wheel you have around 9,600 lbs on the axles. Michelin CS(BFG is one of theirs) will tell you if you know your weights to use the inflation chart, if not run max sidewall pressure. I have a slightly heavier trailer that is placard for that size and list 65 lbs inflation. I run 71 pounds after finding a slight more wear on the outer edges years ago. My friends similar size trailer was placard at 80 PSI. So not everyone agrees.
Michelin will also tell you that over inflation reduces braking and increases the chance of impact damage. Weight the axles, check the inflation chart and add 5 PSI would be my answer.
Chris
โMar-11-2015 08:13 AM
Shoe2728 wrote:
I had St 235 80R 16E went to BF Goodrich Commercial T/A All-Season 235 85R 16E GVW of FW is 12000. I have looked for a pressure weight table but mostly all I fine is max inflation rate is 80 psi. I have a 2011 crossroads cruiser 305skp
โMar-11-2015 08:05 AM
wilber1 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:phillyg wrote:
Run them at max pressure indicated on the tires.
Are you saying you run 80psi on your 350 on all 4 tires all the time? If so how many miles did you get on your last set of tires?
The OP was asking a question about trailer tires on the 5th wheel forum. Somehow it became about trucks.
โMar-11-2015 08:01 AM
โMar-11-2015 08:01 AM
avvidclif1 wrote:
There is enough tire expertise on this group that they should be able to design the PERFECT trailer tire. If only the mfgs and engineers would listen to the pros.
โMar-11-2015 07:58 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:phillyg wrote:
Run them at max pressure indicated on the tires.
Are you saying you run 80psi on your 350 on all 4 tires all the time? If so how many miles did you get on your last set of tires?
โMar-11-2015 07:55 AM
avvidclif1 wrote:
There is enough tire expertise on this group that they should be able to design the PERFECT trailer tire. If only the mfgs and engineers would listen to the pros.