โJun-10-2019 04:46 PM
โJun-12-2019 08:37 AM
fj12ryder wrote:ChuckSteed wrote:So far there's no indication that the Sailun isn't the best. There are still a few reports of issues with the Goodyear and they have had some real problems in the past. So far I've read of 2 Sailun tires that there have been problems. If someone offered me my choice of tire at no cost to me, it would still be the Sailun with no hesitation.
Sailun tires are as good as any GY tires made for RVs... personally I run a Geo Star Chinese made G rated 14 ply tire... starting 4th season... r7n them at 105 to 110 psi...
They will continue to perform quite well... GY G614 is a nice tire but not worth the cost factor when a good G rated 14 ply tire will work just as well
If youโve got money to burn then buy the best....Sailun would be your huckleberry
IMO this is one of those times when higher price is not an indication of higher quality.
โJun-12-2019 08:33 AM
fj12ryder wrote:azdryheat wrote:Looks like a well thought out post, good points until that last sentence. That mis-statement throws the whole post into doubt.
What I know is I've had two 5th wheels in the last eight years running Michelin truck tires, traveling all over the US in the heat of summer and have yet to have a tire issue. I don't baby my tires and I don't run them at max pressure. My current Michelins are five years old and are wearing fine. So called tire experts can talk about shear and degrees and such but I'll talk from actual tire usage and the 100% reliability of my truck tires. Truck tires are tough and can take the abuse, Chinese trailer tires can't.
My Sailun ST tires, and almost every other one I've read about have lasted with no issues. Chinese-made and an ST tire, but an excellent tire that I would buy again in a heartbeat.
โJun-12-2019 06:28 AM
ChuckSteed wrote:So far there's no indication that the Sailun isn't the best. There are still a few reports of issues with the Goodyear and they have had some real problems in the past. So far I've read of 2 Sailun tires that there have been problems. If someone offered me my choice of tire at no cost to me, it would still be the Sailun with no hesitation.
Sailun tires are as good as any GY tires made for RVs... personally I run a Geo Star Chinese made G rated 14 ply tire... starting 4th season... r7n them at 105 to 110 psi...
They will continue to perform quite well... GY G614 is a nice tire but not worth the cost factor when a good G rated 14 ply tire will work just as well
If youโve got money to burn then buy the best....Sailun would be your huckleberry
โJun-11-2019 09:19 PM
ChuckSteed wrote:
Sailun tires are as good as any GY tires made for RVs... personally I run a Geo Star Chinese made G rated 14 ply tire... starting 4th season... r7n them at 105 to 110 psi...
They will continue to perform quite well... GY G614 is a nice tire but not worth the cost factor when a good G rated 14 ply tire will work just as well
If youโve got money to burn then buy the best....Sailun would be your huckleberry
โJun-11-2019 06:54 PM
JIMNLIN wrote:
Your 17.5" Sailuns have a 6008 lb capacity per tire at 120 psi on a trailer with 7k or even 8k axles...Unfortunately, attempting to obtain accurate individual tire position weight is practically impossible at all truck scales.**
โJun-11-2019 06:46 PM
azdryheat wrote:
What I know is I've had two 5th wheels in the last eight years running Michelin truck tires, traveling all over the US in the heat of summer and have yet to have a tire issue. I don't baby my tires and I don't run them at max pressure. My current Michelins are five years old and are wearing fine. So called tire experts can talk about shear and degrees and such but I'll talk from actual tire usage and the 100% reliability of my truck tires. Truck tires are tough and can take the abuse, Chinese trailer tires can't.
โJun-11-2019 06:16 PM
โJun-11-2019 04:41 PM
azdryheat wrote:Looks like a well thought out post, good points until that last sentence. That mis-statement throws the whole post into doubt.
What I know is I've had two 5th wheels in the last eight years running Michelin truck tires, traveling all over the US in the heat of summer and have yet to have a tire issue. I don't baby my tires and I don't run them at max pressure. My current Michelins are five years old and are wearing fine. So called tire experts can talk about shear and degrees and such but I'll talk from actual tire usage and the 100% reliability of my truck tires. Truck tires are tough and can take the abuse, Chinese trailer tires can't.
โJun-11-2019 03:34 PM
Planning wrote:What I know is I've had two 5th wheels in the last eight years running Michelin truck tires, traveling all over the US in the heat of summer and have yet to have a tire issue. I don't baby my tires and I don't run them at max pressure. My current Michelins are five years old and are wearing fine. So called tire experts can talk about shear and degrees and such but I'll talk from actual tire usage and the 100% reliability of my truck tires. Truck tires are tough and can take the abuse, Chinese trailer tires can't.azdryheat wrote:
Why should my trailer be any different?
Because it is a different type of vehicle with different types of forces impacting the tires. With tires on multi-axle trailers, like RV trailers, the belt (interply) shear forces can be 24% higher than the belt shear forces of identical size, load and inflation tires on a motorized vehicle.
The internal structural forces are different for torque than for high "slip angle" which is the situation in trailer application. Front tires on cars, motorhome or tow vehicles experience slip angle usually in the 1ยฐ range while trailer tires are subject to angles in the 10ยฐ and greater range. The forces are NOT linear. 10ยฐ can generate significantly more shear than 1ยฐ.
Here is a large amount of data compiled by tire engineers regarding this issue: http://www.rvtiresafety.net/search/label/Interply%20Shear
โJun-11-2019 10:39 AM
ChuckSteed wrote:
Sailun tires are as good as any GY tires made for RVs... personally I run a Geo Star Chinese made G rated 14 ply tire... starting 4th season... r7n them at 105 to 110 psi...
They will continue to perform quite well... GY G614 is a nice tire but not worth the cost factor when a good G rated 14 ply tire will work just as well
If youโve got money to burn then buy the best....Sailun would be your huckleberry
โJun-11-2019 06:12 AM
โJun-10-2019 07:11 PM
azdryheat wrote:
Why should my trailer be any different?
โJun-10-2019 06:30 PM
โJun-10-2019 06:24 PM
โJun-10-2019 05:50 PM