โJul-20-2016 12:46 PM
โJul-21-2016 11:24 AM
jwakeman wrote:
what about the ST speed rating of 65mph? Also I see dozens of transporter on I80 all doing 65MPH or less what do they know we do not know?
โJul-21-2016 11:20 AM
โJul-21-2016 07:43 AM
aviator41 wrote:IMO ST tires in general are fine for lightweight trailers, not heavy long fifth wheels.
I personally am a Maxxis fan. Been for a very long time. I've run their trailer tires on utility trailers, the MT tires on 4 different trucks and even their ATV tires back when I was young, foolish, and racing a suped up Honda 400EX.
By far the best tire I've ever had the pleasure of buying. I've heard lots of good things about the Sailun tire, but Maxxis is where my money will go as I have confidence in their products.
I would have certainly paid a reasonable amount to upgrade the axles and tires on our newly purchased RV, had we been given the option! No question about it.
โJul-21-2016 07:41 AM
bbaker2001 wrote:When you unhitch, the front legs take the burden. You can put down the rear stabilizers, but you're not going to take much weight off the tires because the stabilizers aren't designed to lift the trailer, just make it a bit more solid by adding a stabilizing force.
so if part of the weight is pin weight, when unhitched, what happens to the weight.
also is it ok to set down stablizers when unhitched to take some weight off tires and frame
โJul-20-2016 09:56 PM
โJul-20-2016 09:36 PM
โJul-20-2016 09:09 PM
โJul-20-2016 07:44 PM
โJul-20-2016 07:30 PM
โJul-20-2016 06:40 PM
Posted: 07/20/16 01:46pm Link | Quote | Print | Notify Moderator
So, I'm digging through all the technical information on our RV and finally made it to the tire info.
Our RV has Towmaxx ST tires on it. Yes.. I know... Towmaxx means "replace immediately" in some circles.
Anyway.. here's where I'm confused. the tires are ST235/80R16-E's
According to the Towmaxx website, these tires are rated at 3520lbs @ 80psi when mounted single. Okay, cool. There are four tires on my particular RV, which means it has a total load capacity of 3520 X 4 = 14080lbs. But wait, the GVWR on this RV is 15,500lbs!
So, the tires being the lower number, does this mean that I can carry no MORE than 14080lbs hitched or do I need to account for hitch weight as well? This is 2580lbs. subtract that from the GVWR and you have 12,920lbs which would put me under the max rating for the tires.
This is where I need some help. am I calculating this right?
GVRW - hitch = sprung weight
Sprung weight / number of tires = Max weight per tire
I'm hoping this is right. I'm trying to figure required tire pressures (in case anyone is wondering why I'm doing this
Now I know - I KNOW - I need to go get weights done. I get it. I just don't happen to have a Cat scale at my desk and wouldn't you know it, I left my RV at home when I came to work this morning. So I'm using published, generic weights here - keep that in mind. However, if I'm doing the math right, then I can plug in my scale weights in when I get them this weekend.
โJul-20-2016 05:25 PM
โJul-20-2016 04:00 PM
aviator41 wrote:
Okay. I think I have a handle on it. I was originally not sure of how the pin weight would affect the overall weight of the trailer as distributed over the axles. This clears it up for me.
Thanks guys, I really appreciate the help. I'm trying to avoid blow-outs and I know that having the tire pressures correct is important to that. I'll run everything over a scale this weekend as we head out to get exact numbers.
โJul-20-2016 03:09 PM
โJul-20-2016 03:06 PM