โJun-16-2013 03:01 PM
โJun-17-2013 04:59 PM
Atom Ant wrote:
That is really bad tire mileage on that truck. Might be worthing looking at a different brand. Michelins will give you 60,000 miles. Just think, you'd be out shopping today for your 3rd set.
โJun-17-2013 03:15 PM
โJun-17-2013 02:59 PM
kedanie wrote:
Quote
ol Bombero-JC wrote:
FE - Honesty is the best policy!
Just "new post" the number of ST tires *YOU* have admitted to having gone through in your "new post"..
.
I quit posting information about my personal tire use because of the out of out of context comments with negative connotations.
For the record my trailer tire usage spans 10 years and more than 70,000 trailer miles. My trailer was fitted with OEM tires ST235/80R16D on 6000# axles. The tires were made in the USA and within less than a year they had all failed. Thatโs 10 tires in the first year. Since then Iโve changed out another three sets. My trailer is setting in storage right now with 3 & ยฝ year old tires on it and they will all 5 be changed when we head north this summer.
Iโve always stressed that Iโve never had a tire failure that I thought was reportable. For the past 7 years our tires have been ST235/80R16E rated at 3520# at 80 psi. In that period of time we have had three road damaged failures, two of which resulted in both tires being replaced on that side due to possible overloading. The last tire we lost was at highway speed heading south on US-25 in GA. We could hear the tire blow. We had to go about a mile to a pull-off. There was a nice clean 3 & ยฝโ cut in the LH FWD sidewall. Never saw anything in the road. Itโs still a mystery.
FastEagle
End Quote
Here you go Calvin. That is what you actually admit to using. I would lay odds that the real number is higher.
Keith
โJun-17-2013 02:53 PM
kedanie wrote:
Quote
ol Bombero-JC wrote:
FE - Honesty is the best policy!
Just "new post" the number of ST tires *YOU* have admitted to having gone through in your "new post"..
.
I quit posting information about my personal tire use because of the out of out of context comments with negative connotations.
For the record my trailer tire usage spans 10 years and more than 70,000 trailer miles. My trailer was fitted with OEM tires ST235/80R16D on 6000# axles. The tires were made in the USA and within less than a year they had all failed. Thatโs 10 tires in the first year. Since then Iโve changed out another three sets. My trailer is setting in storage right now with 3 & ยฝ year old tires on it and they will all 5 be changed when we head north this summer.
Iโve always stressed that Iโve never had a tire failure that I thought was reportable. For the past 7 years our tires have been ST235/80R16E rated at 3520# at 80 psi. In that period of time we have had three road damaged failures, two of which resulted in both tires being replaced on that side due to possible overloading. The last tire we lost was at highway speed heading south on US-25 in GA. We could hear the tire blow. We had to go about a mile to a pull-off. There was a nice clean 3 & ยฝโ cut in the LH FWD sidewall. Never saw anything in the road. Itโs still a mystery.
FastEagle
End Quote
Here you go Calvin. That is what you actually admit to using. I would lay odds that the real number is higher.
Keith
โJun-17-2013 02:39 PM
john&bet wrote:
My OEM tires are still on the 5er. Before Fast Eagle screams about how old they are, they get changed in the next couple months. They sit all winter without being moved. Guess I am very,very lucky.
โJun-17-2013 02:36 PM
โJun-17-2013 12:47 PM
robertmcc wrote:
Bought a 2010 Jayco 35 ft 5th wheel in 2011. Went on a couple of short trips (10 to 500 miles round trip). Lived in the trailer for a year in our yard. Began fulltiming in Feb. Got 800 miles and one of the tires separated, with the center of the tread coming out. Had it replaced, drove another 100 miles and had the other one on the same side go flat. Drove another 400 miles and now see a large bulge in one area of the tread on the other side. Have kept tires at 80 psi as our load is max but not over. The tires are GoodYear Marathon ST235/80R16 with an E load rating. Tread looks fine and the tires were manufactured in 2010. Real disappointed with GoodYear. Is this common or have I done something wrong? Sitting in one place too long?
โJun-17-2013 07:06 AM
billmac wrote:
After way too much reading on trailer tires, I've always used LT tires on my rig. Knock on wood....my only tire problem has been a nail.
My reading led me to try Firestone Transforce tires this time.
โJun-17-2013 06:56 AM
โJun-17-2013 05:54 AM
OP says wrote:
Is this common or have I done something wrong? Sitting in one place too long?
โJun-17-2013 03:33 AM
โJun-17-2013 01:43 AM
โJun-16-2013 08:49 PM
kedanie wrote:FastEagle wrote:
When the RV trailer is required to set in one place for extended periods, the owner should try and to reposition (rotate) the tires 180 degrees every 90 days - or more often - if possible. Tire manufacturers use a lot of chemicals to help prevent ozone damage, aging and weather checking - just to name a few. Over long periods of time those chemicals will migrate to the bottom of the tire leaving all areas above them unprotected. Our cars, trucks, etc. are not normally idle for long periods and do not suffer from the lack of protection.
Another beneficial safety precaution would be to provide a barrier between the surface the tire is parked on and the tire. Over long periods of inactivity water can permeate into the tire treads and decay them along with the tires innerliner and maybe even the carcass.
FastEagle
So, is that how you made those 22 ST tires you went through in a 10 year period last so long?
Keith
โJun-16-2013 08:36 PM
FastEagle wrote:
When the RV trailer is required to set in one place for extended periods, the owner should try and to reposition (rotate) the tires 180 degrees every 90 days - or more often - if possible. Tire manufacturers use a lot of chemicals to help prevent ozone damage, aging and weather checking - just to name a few. Over long periods of time those chemicals will migrate to the bottom of the tire leaving all areas above them unprotected. Our cars, trucks, etc. are not normally idle for long periods and do not suffer from the lack of protection.
Another beneficial safety precaution would be to provide a barrier between the surface the tire is parked on and the tire. Over long periods of inactivity water can permeate into the tire treads and decay them along with the tires innerliner and maybe even the carcass.
FastEagle